Study: Salmon do fine in Klamath waters
7/16/2008
By JEFF BARNARD
The Associated PressGRANTS
PASS, Ore. (AP) — If chinook salmon can get past the
dams blocking the Klamath River, they'll do fine in
the waters of the upper basin, a study has found.
A series of small hydroelectric
dams have blocked salmon from Upper Klamath Lake and
its tributaries for a century, but talks are under
way now between the dam owner, PacifiCorp, and state
and federal agencies over a proposal to remove them.
Concerned that water quality and
habitat in the upper basin had deteriorated to the
point salmon could no longer survive there,
biologists put young fish from the Iron Gate
Hatchery on the Klamath River in California in net
pens in Upper Klamath Lake and the Williamson River
in Oregon in 2005 and 2006.
The biologists from the U.S.
Geological Survey, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service and Oregon State University found the fish
went through the biological changes needed to
migrate to the ocean, known as smoltification, and
were not infested with a deadly parasite called
Ceratomyxa shasta, which attacks young fish lower
down in the basin.
Meanwhile, the Oregon Fish and
Wildlife Commission is to vote Friday on whether to
amend its management plan for the Upper Klamath
Basin to allow reintroduction of salmon in the 300
miles of Oregon rivers above the dams.
Roger Smith, Klamath district
biologist for the Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife, said he expects once fish passage is
restored, either through fish ladders or dam
removal, chinook salmon, steelhead and lamprey are
likely to find their way upriver to spawn without
help from man.
"With regards to steelhead, it
should happen very rapidly," Smith said. "With
regards to chinook, lamprey and to some extent coho,
it is somewhat of an unknown."
Upper Klamath Lake may be a
problem, because it represents the only instance on
the West Coast where salmon migrate more than 100
miles upriver, then have to find their way through a
large lake to the tributaries beyond, Smith said.
Due to those concerns, state,
tribal and federal biologists will develop plans for
reintroducing young chinook salmon from a fish
hatchery to the lake to get a population going more
quickly, Smith said.
"It could take 10 years, it could
take 100 years to re-establish fish to upper Klamath
Lake," he said. "Our hope is through man's
intervention, we can at least jump-start it and then
let Mother Nature take over from there."
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On the Net:
ODFW draft plan to reintroduce
salmon to Upper Klamath Basin:
http://www.dfw.state.or.us/fish/docs/salmon_in_klamath.pdf
Study of salmon in Upper Klamath
Basin:
http://online.wr.usgs.gov/ocw/htmlmail/2008/July/PhysioreadyfinalreportOct302007.pdf