University of California, Davis
October 21, 2003
KLAMATH REPORT CALLS FOR BROADER APPROACH TO
SAVING FISH
Editor's note: High-resolution color photographs are
available of
Peter Moyle, Jeffrey Mount, coho salmon and scenes
in the Klamath
Basin. Contact Sylvia Wright, below.
Instead of focusing primarily on how water levels
and flows affect
endangered and threatened fish in Upper Klamath Lake
and the Klamath
River, federal agencies charged with protecting the
fish should pay
greater attention to other causes of harm, says a
new report from the
National Academies' National Research Council.
The report comes today from a committee asked by the
Bush
administration to assess the Klamath Basin situation
after federal
agencies cut off irrigation water to farmers in 2001
in an attempt to
save the endangered fish during a drought. In the
ensuing battles,
the basin became a national flashpoint for
controversy over the
Endangered Species Act.
The 12-person committee of science, law and
economics experts
includes two faculty members from the University of
California,
Davis. They are Peter Moyle, an authority on
Pacific Coast native
fishes, and Jeffrey Mount, an authority on river
management and
restoration.
"We found that the prevailing scientific sentiment
in the basin --
'More water is better for fish' -- was the wrong
approach," Mount
said. "Instead, what matters to the survival of
these fish, and to
the many others at risk in the basin, is where the
water is, when
it's there, what its quality is, and what the
habitats are like."
"The scientists in the basin have collected lots of
great information
but there has been a tendency to use the data to
demonstrate that
more water was needed for the endangered fish,
rather than looking
at alternative explanations," added Moyle.
The research council's Committee on Threatened and
Endangered Fishes
of the Klamath Basin devoted 18 months of volunteer
time to extensive
review and re-analysis of decades worth of data
about the ecosystems
of this 12,000-square-mile watershed. The diverse
ecosystems include
high elevation desert lakes like Upper Klamath Lake
in Southern
Oregon, and rugged snowmelt-fed tributary streams
like the Shasta and
Trinity rivers, in California.
The committee considered studies and reports from
biologists with the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National
Marine Fisheries
Service, which are the two federal agencies charged
with preserving
the fish listed under the Endangered Species Act;
from the U.S.
Bureau of Reclamation, which is the federal agency
managing the
Klamath Project; and from other federal, Oregon and
California
agencies, consulting biologists and academic
scientists.
They considered the fishes' life-cycle needs and
populations; basin
water quality; and the basin's many concurrent
uses, which include
farming, grazing, timber harvest, hydroelectric
production and
recreation.
In the final report, the committee indicated that
some adjustments
(such as increased summer flows down the river)
were needed to the
operation of the Klamath Project, which delivers
irrigation water to
220,000 acres of farmland, but not adjustments as
severe as those
originally proposed by the fisheries agencies.
However, the committee
identified even more strongly the need for other
kinds of initiatives
to protect the fish, such as habitat improvement,
cooler summer water
temperatures in tributaries, removal of dams that
block fish
migration, and changes in the management of
hatcheries.
In 2001, both federal fisheries agencies issued
"biological opinions"
under the Endangered Species Act, in effect
ordering the Bureau of
Reclamation to maintain higher water levels to
protect endangered
shortnose suckers and Lost River suckers and higher
flows to protect
threatened coho salmon.
In its interim report, released in February 2002,
the Research
Council committee found no substantial scientific
support for the
fisheries agencies' requirements, or for lower
minimum water levels
that the bureau had proposed. In this final report
from the
committee, it reiterated those conclusions.
The committee's report covers an array of problems,
such as excessive
growth of algae and depleted oxygen levels in Upper
Klamath Lake,
dams that block spawning migrations, competition
from hatchery fish,
excessive sediment in streams, loss of stream bank
vegetation, and
high water temperatures in the summer.
It also emphasizes the need for a multi-species, or
ecosystem,
approach to management because there are many other
fishes in the
basin that are declining and are either on the road
to being listed
or are species that are important in tribal
fisheries.
"Our main conclusion is that you can't fix Upper
Klamath Lake,
although there are some good things that can be
done to the Klamath
River," said Moyle. "The main solutions lie in the
tributaries, and
the Shasta River is our favorite. It is fixable in
a way that others
aren't.
"It once flowed all summer, crystal-clear cold
water, and had huge
runs of coho salmon, Chinook salmon and steelhead
trout. If you
reduced its use for irrigated pasture and alfalfa
fields, that would
lower its temperature. If you removed Dwinnell Dam,
you'd increase
access to spawning and young-fish habitat. That
sort of system
approach is what's needed in the Klamath Basin."
"For too long, Klamath managers have relied on
fixing their problems
by turning only one knob -- the knob of raising and
lowering water
levels in Upper Klamath Lake and in the river. They
need to take new
approaches that support multiple populations of
fish and healthy
ecosystems throughout the watershed," said Mount.
Other specific actions the committee recommended
included:
* Healthy sucker populations in lakes such as Clear
Lake and Gerber
Lake should be preserved and protected. Water
should be restored to
Tule Lake and Lower Klamath Lake to support suckers
there.
* The Chiloquin Dam on the Sprague River should be
removed.
Approximately 12 feet tall, it blocks as much as 90
percent of the
spawning habitat for suckers above Upper Klamath
Lake.
* All other diversions that capture suckers from
tributaries or lakes
should be either removed, screened or remodeled to
reduce fish
mortality.
* To help coho salmon, cool water should be
procured in tributaries
-- by purchasing, leasing or trading for
groundwater -- and woody
vegetation should be restored to provide shade.
* Large dams, such as Iron Gate Dam and Dwinnell
Dam, should be
evaluated for removal in order to provide access to
cool tributary
spawning grounds.
* The two current fish-hatchery operations should be
re-evaluated.
"We saw no reasonable evidence that the hatcheries
are contributing
to the recovery of wild salmon in the system," said
Moyle. "Hatchery
fish are bigger than wild fish. When millions are
released into the
Klamath River, the hatchery fish can either compete
with or prey on
the smaller wild fish, especially in the few good
places where there
is cold water in summer." He suggests that one
hatchery be closed for
a three-year period -- the typical life span of a
coho salmon -- and
the results be studied.
* The two fisheries agencies should use their
authority to modify
forestry and road-construction activities on
federal lands that are
causing damage to fish habitat.
* The agencies should expand their efforts to
reduce "takings," or
harm, of coho on private land.
* Recovery teams for suckers and salmon should be
established, guided
by master plans and reviewed by outside experts
every three years.
The recovery-team scientists should frequently
publish their key
findings in peer-reviewed journals.
The National Research Council is the principal
operating arm of the
National Academy of Sciences and the National
Academy of Engineering.
It is a private, nonprofit institution that
provides advice to the federal
government on science and technology under a
congressional charter.
The University of California is one of the world's
foremost research and
teaching institutions, and UC Davis is the
University of
California's flagship campus for environmental
studies. UC Davis is a
global leader in environmental studies relating to
endangered species
management; water and air pollution; water and land
use; agricultural
practices; invasive plants and animals; climate
change; resource
economics; information technology; and human
society and culture. One
in six of UC Davis' 1,500 faculty members
specializes in an
environment-related subject.
Copies of the committee's final report, "Endangered
and Threatened
Fishes in the Klamath River Basin: Causes of Decline
and Strategies
for Recovery," will be available to the public early
next year from
the National Academies Press. Reporters may obtain
a pre-publication
copy from the National Research Council news office,
(202) 334-2138;
news@nas.edu.
Additional information:
National Research Council news release, Oct. 21,
2003
http://www4.nationalacademies.org/news.nsf/isbn/0309090970?OpenDocument>
Committee final report, October 2003 (when
available)
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10838.html>
National Research Council news release, Feb. 6, 2002
<http://www4.nas.edu/news.nsf/isbn/0309083249?OpenDocument>
Committee interim report, February 2002
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309083249/html/>
Media contact(s):
* Sylvia Wright, UC Davis News Service, (530)
752-7704; tonight at
home, (530) 758-3123;
swright@ucdavis.edu
Additional contact(s):
* Peter Moyle, Wildlife, Fish and Conservation
Biology, (530)
752-6355,
pbmoyle@ucdavis.edu
* Jeffrey Mount, Geology, (530) 752-7092,
mount@geology.ucdavis.edu
View this story on the Web at
<http://www.news.ucdavis.edu/search/news_detail.lasso?id=6739>
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