Oregon State University
HERMISTON,
Ore. – Oregon State University researchers, in collaboration with scientists
from the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, are
researching what happens to fish and invertebrates when water from the
Umatilla and Walla Walla rivers is diverted for irrigation purposes in
neighboring basins.
Many Western rivers are used for irrigation during the summer months, and
agriculture often competes with fish for water use. This competition has been
hotly debated across the West since 2001, when irrigation to most of
Oregon’s Klamath Basin was cut off to protect threatened coho salmon.
“There’s a lot of interest in trying to leave more water in the river for
fish,” said David Wooster, a riparian entomologist at OSU’s Hermiston
Agricultural Research and Extension Center and the lead investigator. “But
there is actually very little science about water levels in rivers and at what
point you see an impact of water withdrawal on fish and invertebrates.”
In the course of the OSU project, which is funded by a $465,000 grant from the
USDA National Research Initiative Competitive Grant program, Wooster said, he
hopes the team of researchers can aid water managers in assessing irrigation
strategies by providing them with useful, accurate information about the
impact of diversions on river dependent organisms.
He said that “in no way” is the project meant to be a critique of surface
water use for irrigation.
“We’re in an area with a limited supply of water, and a high level of
agriculture that’s incredibly important to the economy,” Wooster said,
adding that stakeholders in the basins have a history of working together
toward watershed health. “So far, the different parties involved in the
water issue have done a very good job of cooperating. This work has the
opportunity to assist in the understanding of water withdrawals and help guide
policies about irrigation that may otherwise by detrimental to irrigators.”
Researchers have already conducted numerous research projects looking at
changes in water quality, temperature and flow on the rivers, but the OSU
project is unique in that it is looking at what happens to the rivers’
biota, said Jesse Schwartz, the research, monitoring and evaluating program
director for the tribes’ Department of Fisheries.
To do this, the scientists will determine whether the effect of water
withdrawal is consistent with a proportional model, where the response of the
ecosystem is proportional to the amount of water withdrawn, or a threshold
response model, where there is little response below the threshold, but a
large response above the threshold.
“Responses can take two forms,” said Schwartz. “One response to
diversion could be a change in the abundance of what’s there. We could
simply see fewer critters. Or we could see a change in what’s living and
moving around there. Right now we don’t know what to expect, and it’s
possible that we won’t see either response.”
The team of researchers will not only examine the responses of fish and
invertebrates in the river, but also organisms in the riparian area adjacent
to the river, said Sandy DeBano, a riparian entomologist in OSU’s College of
Agricultural Sciences.
USDA National Research Initiative grants support important, high-priority
research in the biological, environmental, physical and social sciences that
is relevant to agriculture, food and the environment.
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