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This Website is Dedicated to
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January
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‘Good
science’ casts doubt on blame laid on Basin farms
February 19,
2008
Klamath Falls
Herald and
News Editorial
The “good science, bad science” debate has been going on for about
as long as there have been water conflicts in the
Klamath
Basin
.
It was a major point in the irrigation water cutoff
on the Klamath Reclamation Project in 2001 and the fish die-off on the
lower Klamath
River
a year later.
The science issue has made its way through state and
federal agencies and endless court cases. And now a point that local
farmers and ranchers have contended for years has gotten some additional
scientific support.
Recent studies by the Oregon Department of Geology
and Mineral Industries say there’s a higher than normal amount of
naturally occurring phosphorous in Upper Klamath Lake, where the Klamath
River begins. (Officially, the river begins at
Lake
Ewauna
, which is connected to
Upper Klamath Lake
by the
Link
River
.)
Phosphorus generally is regarded as a pollutant, and the blame for
its high level is usually put on fertilizer and livestock manure from
farmers’ and ranchers’ fields in the
Upper
Klamath
Basin
.
Ian Madin, chief scientist for the department,
however, questions how accurate that claim is and how much value there
is in efforts to reduce fertilizer use and ranching to decrease
phosphorous in the water.
“Some of the impact of phosphorous is natural,”
Madin said. “If a large percentage is natural and farmers are not
allowed to use phosphorous, it could have no impact on the water
quality, but could be detrimental to farmers.”
Not a new issue
The phosphorus found in the local area is about 10
times that found elsewhere.
The issue of how much phosphorous occurs naturally
has come up before. A few years ago, for example, State Sen. Doug
Whitsett raised it in a Herald and News commentary that challenged the
value of shallow water storage in the
Klamath
Basin
.
When it comes to water storage, deep impoundments,
such as the
Long
Lake
proposal under study by the
Bureau of Reclamation (endlessly, it seems) constitute the gold
standard. Shallow ones lose far more of their water to evaporation
because of their large surface area. The water is also more exposed to
phosphorous-bearing soil and peat. The Basin has no deep-water
reservoirs.
There’s always debate about the “science”
involved in water issues, and “whose” science is good and whose is
bad.
Something people have learned about such things is
that they’re complex, and that no matter how much we know, there’s
more to learn.
The state’s geologic studies may have filled in one
of the gaps. It’s welcome to have a piece of “good” science that
says that
Upper
Basin
agriculture may not be the
bogeyman it’s frequently made out to be.
Pat Bushey wrote
today’s editorial.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2008/02/19/viewpoints/
op-ed/doc47ba81961724c735010196.txt
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