http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2003/10/29/news/community_news/city01.txt
State report supports regulating lake levels
But science panel cautions that managing water
levels alone will not prevent die-offs
published Oct. 29, 2003
By LEE JUILLERAT
A state science panel believes Upper Klamath Lake
levels can be regulated to protect endangered sucker
populations, but cautions that "lake level
management alone will not prevent sucker die-offs."
The Independent Multidisciplinary Science Team,
which spent two years studying Klamath Basin water
concerns, also believes federal agencies acted
reasonably when they withheld water to 220,000 acres
of Klamath Basin farms in 2001.
The conclusion conflicts with an opinion released
last week by the National Resource Council, a
federal science panel. The Council said the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine
Fisheries Service should not have cut off the water
to protect two species of suckers.
The state report also concludes that a September
2002 fish kill, which resulted in the deaths of at
least 33,000 adult salmon and steelhead on the Lower
Klamath River, was influenced but not solely caused
by reduced flows from Upper Klamath Lake.
Based on the state report, the fish kill resulted
from a combination of high densities of fish from
low stream flows and resulting restricted fish
passage, warm water temperatures, and favorable
conditions for fish diseases.
Although the federal panel said there was no
relationship between Klamath River flows and coho
salmon, the state panel "concludes that
relationships between flows, habitat requirements
and temperature support management actions to
maintain minimum in-stream flows in the Klamath
River basin."
The state and national panels agree on many points,
such as the need for increased coordination among
all state, federal and tribal agencies involved with
Upper and Lower Klamath Basin water-related issues.
Based on the state report, "Management of tributary
spawning habitat, using watershed approach, will be
important to the survival of sucker populations."
Like the federal panel, the state group emphasized
that declines in native fish, including shortnose
and Lost River suckers, cannot be halted only by
withholding water from the Klamath Irrigation
Project, as was done in 2001.
"... Prescribed lake levels will not ensure sucker
survival or prevent fish die-offs," the state report
says. "... There is no strong scientific data to
link fish kills with lake levels between 1990 and
2000. This lack of a clear relationship, however,
does not indicate that management of lake levels is
unwarranted."
The state report says regulating lake levels is "one
of the few options available to management agencies
to protect sucker populations ... but lake level
management alone will not prevent sucker die-offs.
The minimum lake levels required for protection of
suckers are not exact."
Repairs to wildlife habitat, such as spawning areas
for suckers in the Williamson and Sprague rivers,
are needed, based on the state report.
"Assessment of the potential effectiveness of the
existing fish ladder for passage of adult suckers at
the Chiloquin Dam is needed and, if necessary, the
ladder should be modified and made more effective
for passage of suckers," says the study.
''I think we all see a need to look across the
landscape for solutions,'' said Stanley Gregory, an
Oregon State University professor who co-chairs the
state panel.
Oregon law created the state panel to provide advice
on the needs of protected salmon. In April 2001,
during the Klamath Basin water shut-off, then-Gov.
John Kitzhaber asked the scientists to review the
science behind the decision to withhold irrigation
water.
The state panel includes scientists from Oregon
State University, the University of Idaho, U.S.
Geological Survey and U.S. Bureau of Land
Management. It agreed on its position in April, and
sent its report to Gov. Ted Kulongoski early this
month.
The governor's staff is reviewing the report.
The state report is available on the Internet at
www.fsl.orst.edu/imst/ under technical reports.
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