
Acoustic
Tag Salmon Study Refutes Environmentalists’ Breaching Benefits Claims
NEWS RELEASE
THE COALITION FOR IDAHO WATER,
INC.
1010 W. Jefferson St., Suite
101
,
BOISE
,
IDAHO
83702
Telephone: 208-344-6690
~ Fax: 208-344-2744
For More Information Contact:
Norm Semanko (208) 863-7921 or (208) 344-6690
Boise
,
Idaho
– January 17, 2007
A new scientific study tracking the movement and survival
of juvenile salmon down the Snake and
Columbia
Rivers
to the Pacific Ocean is clearly showing the four lower
Snake River
dams are not the problem opponents make them out to be, officials
with the Coalition for Idaho Water said today.
One especially significant finding in the study shows that the four
Snake River dams cause no additional mortality for juvenile salmon
originating in
Idaho
’s
Clearwater
drainage.
“This crucial new data puts a bullet in the heart of arguments that
tearing out the dams will somehow become a silver bullet remedy in
salmon recovery efforts,” said Norm Semanko, President of
the Coalition for Idaho Water.
Scientists using special acoustic tags planted in fish found that the 19
percent survival rate of
Idaho
juvenile salmon reaching the ocean was essential identical to migrating
salmon that originate in the
Yakima
drainage in
Washington
. In other words, juvenile salmon passing through the four
Snake River
dams suffered no higher mortality rates than those that did not.
“This is extremely significant to
Idaho
because fish from the
Yakima
drainage migrate through only the four lower Columbia Dams while the
Idaho Clearwater fish migrate through the four lower Snake River dams as
well as the lower
Columbia River
dams,” Semanko added.
Even more compelling were findings showing the 19 percent survival rate
of both
Yakima
and
Clearwater
fish was the same as survival measured in the
Fraser
River
in
British Columbia
, a river with no dams.
The study, headed by Marine biologist David Welch of Kintama
Research Inc., a Canadian firm, is part of a three-year project for the
Bonneville Power Administration, part of on-going salmon recovery
investigations. This research is being conducted with acoustic
tags place in juvenile salmon. It is the first technology that has
been able to track these fish into the ocean and along the coast.
Another finding from the research revealed that juvenile salmon
transported by fish barges survived from Lower Granite Dam to the
northern tip of
Vancouver Island
at five times the rate of fish that were not barged. This strongly
contradicts claims by environmentalists that barging juvenile salmon
through the four
Snake River
dams is ineffective.
The researchers also noted that any proposal to breach the lower
Snake River
dams for salmon recovery is moot because it is simply not supported by
the science.
They base that on reports examined that show more than 99 percent of
adult fish migrating upstream survived through the lower
Snake River
dams at over 99 percent. When coupled with a NOAA Fisheries’
report that juvenile fish survival moving downstream is as high as it
was when there were only four dams.
The new findings also corroborate other research that indicates salmon
survival through the hydropower system has been substantially increased
due to corrective measures taken by the BPA and dam operators, both in
dam operations and addition of fish passage structures.
“This new science refutes claims by environmentalists that the four
lower
Snake River
dams need to be removed. It also makes it crystal clear that additional
water from southern
Idaho
is not needed to produce high survival rates among the juvenile fish,”
Semanko added.
The researchers also noted that the government is installing removable
spillway weirs at the dams which will provide safe passage with far less
spill than is currently required by the
US Court
. That means it will be possible to provide safe in river passage
with far less spill, water that then can be used for power generation.
The Coalition for Idaho Water is formed from more than 50 different
organizations representing
Idaho
counties, cities, chambers of commerce, industrial, municipal and
commercial water users, and agricultural groups.
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