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Scientists cautiously optimistic
about recovery
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Shortnose sucker illustration by Joseph Tomelleri/U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service |
By JILL AHO
H&N Staff Writer
Maybe how much
water is in Upper Klamath Lake isn’t the most critical element
to the survival of the endangered Lost River and shortnose
suckers. Maybe the rivers and wetlands that feed the lake, not
the lake itself, dictate whether the fish survive.
That’s what researchers
have learned since the sucker was listed 21 years ago as an
endangered species, said U.S. Fish and Wildlife fish biologist
Mark Buettner.
At the time, little was
known about the habitats, needs and populations of Lost River
and shortnose suckers. What was known was the fish were in rapid
decline, and no significant additions to the population in Upper
Klamath Lake had been seen in 18 years.
That decline — and the
resulting federal listing — put the sucker at the heart of an
ongoing struggle for water rights in the Klamath Basin.
The sucker — culturally and
historically significant to the Klamath Tribes — was often
blamed for the 2001 water shutoff to irrigators in the Klamath
Reclamation Project.
Federal officials maintained
they had to cut irrigation to maintain water levels in Upper
Klamath Lake for the endangered fish.
Federal officials
maintained they had to cut irrigation to maintain water levels
in Upper Klamath Lake for the endangered fish.
That shutoff spurred what is
now known as the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, a proposal
that aims to settle water disputes throughout the Klamath River
watershed.
The removal of four hydroelectric dams along the river to
restore salmon runs is key to the agreement and is being
negotiated by the dam owners PacifiCorp and other stakeholders.
But recovery of the sucker and delisting the fish from the
Endangered Species List is one way to help ensure stable water
supplies for farmers, some say.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, along with a team of
scientists and other stakeholders, is drafting a plan to do so.
The sucker recovery plan should be ready for review by
scientists from outside the Klamath Basin in October, Buettner
said. The team will provide input on whether actions may harm
stakeholders and are reasonable, Buettner said.
Learning about the fish
While the plan is being developed, more is
becoming known about the suckers. Biologists found sucker
populations in Lost River, Clear Lake, Gerber Reservoir, Tule
Lake and reservoirs through the Klamath River.
“Another key research finding was the management of Klamath
Lake,” Buettner said. “Basically, it was felt that you had to
have certain high lake levels in order to protect the habitat
for spawning and shoreline vegetation for young suckers, and you
didn’t want that lake to get too low or it would affect algae
blooms.
“(But) a lot of research has indicated lake-level management
is less critical to the survival of the fish than we previously
thought.”
Beginning in 1992, Upper Klamath Lake was kept at a minimum
elevation of 4,139 feet. A Fish and Wildlife Service biological
opinion issued in 2001 raised the minimum to 4,140 feet with no
exceptions for droughts, according to the Bureau of Reclamation.
In 2001, there was a drought, forcing the BOR to cut off the
irrigation deliveries to farmers in the Klamath Project.
“In 2001, we had very strict lake level requirements,”
Buettner said. “We thought lake level management affected algae
blooms.”
Lake level management was modified based on a 2008 biological
opinion from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that allows the
lake to drop to a minimum of 4,137.5 feet in September, the end
of the irrigation season.
Surviving to adulthood
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Lost
River suckers can live 43 years. The survival of
young fish in Upper Klamath Lake is a concern. |
Research also indicates that larval and juvenile suckers are
dependent on the presence of wetland vegetation for survival,
Buettner said.
“As a result of that, restoration of the Williamson River
Delta was recently completed, and we’re expecting some pretty
major benefits from that restoration and improved survival of
young suckers,” he said.
There is a gap in ages of suckers in the lake, and no
significant populations of young fish have been added. Young
suckers were suspected to be leaving the lake through the A
Canal, and in 2002, the Bureau of Reclamation installed a fish
screen to address entrainment.
The screen is working, according to Bureau of Reclamation
spokesman Kevin Moore.
But young suckers still are not surviving in large enough
numbers in Upper Klamath Lake to indicate the fish is
recovering, Buettner said.
Suckers are long-lived. The Lost River sucker lives as long
as 43 years and reaches sexual maturity at about nine years. The
shortnose sucker lives as long as 33 years and reaches sexual
maturity at six or seven years.
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H&N photo by Jill Aho - Missy
Braham, a fish technician with the Bureau of
Reclamation, prepares to measure a young sucker
caught by a fish screen on the A Canal. Once a week,
fish biologists visit the evaluation station to see
what kinds of fish are being diverted from the canal
and sent back to Upper Klamath Lake.
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Although the fish lay thousands of eggs and many get
fertilized, the young are eaten by native and non-native fish
and are particularly susceptible to poor water quality
conditions in the lake, biologists say.
“We’re cautiously optimistic that a lot of the projects that
have taken place in that area will result in improved survival,”
Buettner said. “We still have thousands of Lost River and
shortnose suckers, but they’re primarily adults. For recovery,
we would want to see a more diverse age class structure.”
Addressing problems
Major die-offs of suckers in Upper Klamath Lake have
diminished the available adult breeding population by 80 to 90
percent, Buettner said. Warm temperatures and high
concentrations of blue-green algae, which reduce the amount of
dissolved oxygen in the water, create stressful conditions for
the fish, he said.
No major fish die-offs have been observed since 1997, but
that doesn’t mean the fish survived.
Brian
Hayes, a U.S. Geological Survey fish biologist, shows a
large female Lost River
sucker
from Upper Klamath Lake
“Some of our adult survival information shows that even
though we don’t see a bunch of dead fish, there have been
years when adult survival hasn’t been as high as we thought
it would be,” Buettner said. “The lake is so big, so turbid,
you may not see the fish.”
Upper Klamath Lake’s algae blooms occur every year. It is
believed that nutrients from downstream, exacerbated by land
use practices in the late 1800s and early 1900s, are
contributing to the blooms, Buettner said.
“Most of those are legacy effects. They happened a long,
long time ago,” he said. “(The lake) used to be more diverse
in the types of algae, and in the last 100 years, it’s been
a monoculture of this blue green algae. It just flourishes.”
Restoration of wetland areas near Upper Klamath Lake may
help to address the sediment problems that contribute to
algae blooms. Wetlands are thought to act as a sponge that
filters out nutrients.
“A lot of the nutrient issues have been improved, but one
of the challenges is Klamath Lake is shallow, and there’s a
lot of these nutrients that have accumulated in the shallow
bottom. It takes time for those nutrients to decrease,”
Buettner said.
“It may have taken a century to get to the current status,
and it’s going to take a long period of time to make major
improvements in water quality of the lake.”
In the meantime, it is important to make sure the fish
have refuge in areas like Pelican Bay, Wood River and the
Williamson River Delta, biologists say. The areas are cooler
and have more oxygen than the open lake.
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research and educational purposes only. For more
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