State wants lake on Holloman air base closed (copy)

Lake Holloman on Holloman Air Force Base in October 2018. Months later, the New Mexico attorney general requested the U.S. Air Force close the lake to the public after detecting high levels of hazardous chemicals. The state now is advising people to avoid eating the meat of animals they have hunted in the area after a study found high levels of PFAS in wildlife, while an advisory to not drink, swim in or even touch the lake's water remains in place.

A research team has found “unexpectedly high” levels of cancer-causing chemicals in birds and rodents around the artificial lake and wetlands near Holloman Air Force Base, which had discharged contaminated wastewater into that area for decades.

University of New Mexico researchers detected what they call extraordinary amounts of PFAS in 20 out of 23 bird species and in dozens of rodents that scurry around Lake Holloman, as well as ponds and wetlands, which the Air Force created as catchments for treated effluent and together form a desert oasis within the Tularosa Basin.

The team tested a mixture of ducks, songbirds and shore birds along with a blend of recently caught rodents and those whose carcasses were preserved for 30 years. The average PFAS reading both for birds and rodents was more than 10,000 parts per billion.