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Klamath fish dying by the thousands
triplicate ^

Posted on 09/24/2002 1:07:30 PM PDT by chance33_98


Klamath fish dying by the thousands

Published: September 24, 2002

By Laura Brown

Triplicate staff writer

Thousands of dead chinook salmon have been washing up along the banks of the Klamath river since Thursday of last week, causing anglers to wonder if low river levels and extremely warm water temperatures are killing the fish.

Fishery experts are not yet willing to make that connection.

"What we're doing right now is investigating," said George Gilliam, Fishery Program Leader of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. He, along with California Fish and Game and members of the Yurok, Hoopa and Karuk tribes, has been counting fish and collecting data.

So far, only two deceased coho, or silver salmon, listed as "threatened" under the State and Federal Endangered Species Act, have been discovered.

The dead fish show a high incidence of disease. Symptoms include eroded gills, unusual growth referred to commonly as "gill rot," and a bloody vent area. Fish near death have been found bloated, listless and bobbing to the surface or being washed downstream.

"For me this is the worst I've seen," said Larry Hartley, a Klamath resident for five years and a fisherman on the river for 25 years.

"These were bright fish, not dark. They hadn't been in the system that long," said Hartley as he and his friends began to load up their gear at the old Klamath townsite boat ramp yesterday. Just a few yards away, large lifeless salmon floated on the water's surface.

Upstream, the numbers of dead fish have been staggering. The fish that travel to tributaries such as the Trinity, Scott and Shasta rivers to spawn are dying at Blue Creek, 16 miles upriver.

At Blakes Riffle near Klamath Glen, Lawrence Lazio counted 100 fish within 100 yards. In his hand he carried a list of state representatives that he was making copies of to hand out to other concerned citizens.

"All I'm trying to do is stir up people," said Lazio talking from his pickup truck in Klamath yesterday. "I'm trying to beat the drums as much as possible to get an answer."

The Bureau of Reclamation releases water from the Iron Gate Dam downstream into the Klamath River and diverts water from the river into a series of irrigation canals that feed farms and wildlife refuges in the Klamath and Tule Lake basins. The bureau made the decision to significantly reduce flows in the Klamath River this year after two biological opinions stated there was no scientific evidence to prove coho salmon needed higher water to survive.

Currently the water released from the Iron Gate Dam into the river's mainstem is flowing at 760-cubic-feet per second. Last year at this time, the flows were kept at 1,300 cfs in keeping with tribal trust obligations.

The water released from the Iron Gate Reservoir is warm, as much as 72 degrees fahrenheit.

"It's not the kind of water that would be healthy for fish restoration," said Jeff McCracken of the Bureau of Reclamation. Many argue that releasing more water downstream at the end of summer could actually be detrimental to fish.

The other main source of water for the Klamath is the Trinity River, which experienced fish kills earlier this summer. According to McCracken, the Klamath River is currently flowing at 45 percent of what it would be if left to its natural state without dams or irrigation diversions.

The Yurok tribe has been forming an alliance with environmental groups and fishermen in an effort to bring more water to the river fish.

"We've been pleading with reclamation for several months to please give us more water so these fish would survive," said Dave Hillemeier, Yurok fisheries biologist. He admits it is too early to blame low water and high temperatures on the fish kill, but doesn't deny that one of the primary problems leading to poor water quality is low water.

"It's hard to put a finger on what exactly it is."

Although an average year for river water was predicted, 2002 is proving to be a dry year. It follows on the heels of a severe drought in 2001 that forced a cutoff of water to basin farmers.

When new water-flow predictions were made, basin farmers were asked to cut their water use by 10 percent or irrigation water would be cut off. After the bureau released 20,000 acre-feet downriver in June, the allotment was significantly reduced to 660 cfs. Irrigation demands are supposed to stop by mid-October, after harvest season.

McCracken said that the river probably won't see an increase in water until rains begin. He also said that he has yet to hear any word from fishery agencies on the fish kill.

The Yurok Tribe, the largest in California with 4,300 members, has always been a fishing community. Many still depend on the river for sustenance and economic stability.

Paul Van-Mechelen, who subsidizes his family's income by selling smoked salmon, wonders what the health of the river will be like for future generations.

"We can't get it back, but it seems like there could be some kind of give."


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; US: California
KEYWORDS: klamathlist
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1 posted on 09/24/2002 1:07:30 PM PDT by chance33_98
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To: chance33_98
The fish had it coming to them.
2 posted on 09/24/2002 1:55:14 PM PDT by ThreeYearLurker
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To: chance33_98
"...are dying at Blue Creek, 16 miles upriver."

"The water released from the Iron Gate Reservoir is warm, as much as 72 degrees fahrenheit."

Okay - they are blaming water quality from the (Upper) Klamath Basin, which is hours and hours away from 16 miles from the mouth of the Klamath where this took place. The water in the Klamath Basin is stored in shallow wetland lakes exposed to sun and the ambient air temperature is in the 90s-100s. The people in the Klamath Basin have pointed out that more water from them means more hot water. That's a fact of nature.

There isn't going to be a vast amount of cold water coming from the mid-Klamath, either. The Shasta River has the shallow lake Shastina for storage, which is also hot. On the Scott, the snow pack from last year has already melted and it hasn't rained lately. There is no storage. People have finished farming and are harvesting. You can't blame the farmers. Most are no longer irrigating. Water levels won't come back in the streams until heavy frost when the trees stop transpiring and the fall rains come. That is the cycle.

Hopes are that someday these "brilliant" (Humboldt State) biologists will rejoin the real world and realize that these Klamath system inland salmon live on the southern extremities of the species' range and, if climate trends continue as they have, they are frequently going to encounter inhospitable temperature conditions early in the spawning season.

You can't demand conditions based on salmon needs that are beyond the natural variability of the system. You can't demand mitigation for nature.

By the way, why aren't they looking at increased cold water flows from Blue Creek as the solution? No source? Well, why doesn't that logic apply to the mid and upper Klamath as well? Can you say political manipulation of public opinion?
3 posted on 09/24/2002 2:22:07 PM PDT by marsh2
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To: chance33_98
What about the suckers? The suckers?
4 posted on 09/24/2002 2:39:08 PM PDT by Mr. Peabody
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To: chance33_98
Don't salmon die after running up river to spawn?
5 posted on 09/24/2002 2:54:36 PM PDT by CPOSharky
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To: *Klamath_List; farmfriend
Index Bump
6 posted on 09/24/2002 3:11:08 PM PDT by Free the USA
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To: Free the USA; Carry_Okie
Thanks for the ping.
7 posted on 09/24/2002 10:41:37 PM PDT by farmfriend
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To: farmfriend
"We've been pleading with reclamation for several months to please give us more water so these fish would survive," said Dave Hillemeier, Yurok fisheries biologist. He admits it is too early to blame low water and high temperatures on the fish kill, but doesn't deny that one of the primary problems leading to poor water quality is low water.

I've met this guy. He has little credibility with me.

"It's hard to put a finger on what exactly it is."

That's right, Dave, because no matter what the problem, your solution will always be the same: Demand more late season water from farmers than the natural system ever delivered. If you get the water, will you pay them back if you are wrong?

8 posted on 09/24/2002 10:57:29 PM PDT by Carry_Okie
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To: CPOSharky
These fish never got to spawn. They were on their way and aquired an acute disease. The green weenies are trying to blame it on the republicans.
9 posted on 09/24/2002 11:06:01 PM PDT by spunkets
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To: marsh2
High unatural flows give the fish no refuge (or refugia as the fish freaks call it) Low natural flows provide that in times of drought. The deep pools are disturbed by high flows. While low flows do not warm the low intergravel flows The water behind the dams is excess water and is only needed in extrordinary cases. Recreationalist (rafters) want all that extra water to float clients upon. Fishermen are fools if the tie their boat to the enviros. More fish will survive under a natural flow regime, and the extra water collected in winter is used to fill the land with fruits and grains.
10 posted on 09/24/2002 11:11:35 PM PDT by steelie
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To: steelie
Did I say fruits?
I should have said food. I get a little biblical at times.
11 posted on 09/24/2002 11:14:01 PM PDT by steelie
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To: Jeff Head
ping
12 posted on 09/24/2002 11:21:28 PM PDT by kayak
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To: kayak
Thanks. Steelie is making good points in post 10.
13 posted on 09/25/2002 7:45:32 AM PDT by Jeff Head
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To: Carry_Okie
"It's hard to put a finger on what exactly it is."

Yea... he's already got two up his pie-hole!

14 posted on 09/25/2002 7:55:16 AM PDT by johnny7
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To: Jeff Head; Grampa Dave; steelie
Fishermen are fools if the tie their boat to the enviros.

Jeff, the "fishermen" who are involved in these fish listings, aren't. They are "represented" by Zeke Grader and Glen Spain at the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermens Associations. These are UN-accredited NGO lawyers working out of the San Francisco Presidio, not fishermen. The fly-fishing groups who were originally associated with the steelhead listing have since disavowed that participation.

15 posted on 09/25/2002 8:12:56 AM PDT by Carry_Okie
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To: Carry_Okie
As you well know, a whole lot of the enviro issues lead to the same place ... UN NGO's.

If any fishermen groups have tied themselves directly to the UM NGO lawyers you mention, then they are even bigger fools. Little wonder the fly-fishermen disavowed it.

16 posted on 09/25/2002 5:22:27 PM PDT by Jeff Head
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To: chance33_98
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm salmon!
17 posted on 09/25/2002 5:24:24 PM PDT by irradiateiraq
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To: Jeff Head
Todays article in the Santa Rosa Press Demoncrat tells the story of how too much water can kill fish.

Although Mr. Hearn is probably misquoted that "higher flows take away the small gravel and sand... that fish need"
They generally need cobble from 1" - 5" depending on the species. Temperature is most affected by unnatural streamflows expieriancing too much solar radiation. (sunlight)

Jeff I and several others that were at Jarbidge and Klamath will try to meet up with the convoy in Calistoga on saturday and go on to Sacramento for Sunday's Rally. See Ya we hope!

18 posted on 09/25/2002 9:01:07 PM PDT by steelie
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To: chance33_98
This story sounds fishy to me.
19 posted on 09/25/2002 9:13:11 PM PDT by mtg
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To: steelie
Bumping for exposure.

20 posted on 09/25/2002 9:23:48 PM PDT by justrepublican
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