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| Iron Gate Dam looking downstream. Iron Gate Hatchery is just below the dam. Photo from ODFW |
• Impacts to fall Chinook will be short-term, and the population
should fully recover to pre-removal levels within five years.
• Spring-run Chinook should experience rapid recovery to pre-dam
removal stock levels.
• Coho salmon should experience only short-term effects and
populations will recover fully.
• Steelhead populations could be highly affected but should
experience a strong recovery.
• Pacific lamprey are expected to recover relatively quickly from
impacts.
The "Sediment Transport analysis" concludes that less than one-third
of the sediment trapped by the dams will be transported downstream,
while nearly all of the sediment that is transported will travel
directly to the ocean without being deposited in the river. Flood
risk will not be increased appreciably, while sediment
concentrations will likely be significant during the first winter
after reservoir drawdown.
After years of negotiations, PacifiCorp, owned by Warren Buffett's
Berkshire Hathaway Corporation, recently agreed to an agreement in
principle with the federal and state governments that could lead to
dam removal after a series of studies are conducted.
"Removal of the dams is part of a broader agreement to restore the
river and revive the basin’s fishing, farming, and tribal
communities through watershed scale restoration, a water sharing
agreement between agriculture and fisheries interests, and
affordable power for local communities," the groups stated. "When
these dams come down it will be the biggest dam removal and river
restoration effort the world has ever seen."
Both agreements are controversial among the diverse Klamath Basin
communities. The Karuk, Yurok and Klamath tribes, American Rivers
and an array of fishing and environmental groups are supporting both
pacts as necessary steps for dam removal and river restoration. On
the other hand, the Hoopa Valley Tribe, Oregon Wild, the North Coast
Environmental Center and others oppose them for a variety of
reasons, including the lack of guarantees for dam removal and river
restoration included in the agreements. Farming groups in the basin
are also divided over support for the pacts.
The Klamath, flowing through Oregon and California, was once the
third most productive salmon fishery on the West Coast after the
Columbia and Sacramento rivers. Removing the four dams and restoring
the river will boost imperiled salmon and steelhead runs by
reopening access to over 300 miles of habitat and eliminating water
quality problems caused by the reservoirs.
The studies were released at a time when California and West Coast
fisheries are in their worst ever crisis because of decades of
mismanagement by the state and federal governments. Salmon fishing
in the ocean off California and Oregon was closed for the first time
in 150 years in 2008, due to the unprecedented collapse of Central
Valley fall chinook salmon populations. Although state and federal
agency staff claim that "ocean conditions" are the cause, a broad
coalition of Indian Tribes, commercial fishermen, recreational
anglers and conservationists point to dramatic increases in water
exports out of the California Delta and declining water quality as
the key factors behind the decline.
While ocean recreational and commercial salmon fisheries were closed
in 2008 due to the collapse of Sacramento River salmon, the Bush and
Schwarzenegger administrations severely restricted commercial salmon
fishing off California and southern Oregon just two years earlier.
The 2006 restrictions were imposed because of the low numbers of
spawning chinooks expected to return to the Klamath that year,
spurred by the Karl Rove-engineered fish kills of 2002. Hundreds of
juvenile salmon perished that spring and over 68,000 adults died
that fall from disease, fostered by low, warm water conditions
resulting from a change in water policy that favored Klamath Basin
farmers over salmon, steelhead and other fish.
These reports and many others can be found at
http://www.americanrivers.org/klamathscience.