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Feds review bull trout habitat
Meeting planned
Wednesday on critical habitat designation
By LEE JUILLERAT Herald
and News 1/31/10
The meeting starts at 6 p.m. in the Chiloquin Community Center.
The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service has proposed revising its 2005
A draft economic analysis estimates the potential costs of the proposal at $5 million to $7 million a year for 20 years, with other costs of $2.5 million to $4.1 million a year.
Bull trout in t he Upper
Klamath Basin are considered genetically unique and are
likely the most threatened population of bull trout in the
U.S., according to Fish and Wildlife spokesman Matt Baun.
In the Klamath Basin,
Baun said, bull trout numbers and their distribution have
declined due to habitat fragmentation, loss of migratory
corridors, poor water quality
Bull trout occupy 60
miles of habitat in the headwaters of three habitat
sub-units.
Bull trout only occur in 21 percent of their historic Klamath River Basin range, Baun said.
“Bull trout are excellent indicators of water quality because they thrive only in cold, clean water,” he said. “Success with restoring habitat for bull trout in the Upper Klamath Basin will help in the recovery of the species, but it will also mean improvements to overall watershed and ecosystem health, which has direct benefits to both human and environmental health.”
Historic habitat
Once plentiful bull trout are now found in less than half their historic range in Oregon, Idaho, Washing ton, Montana and Nevada. In Oregon, the proposed designation covers 3,100 stream miles and 29,139 acres of lakes and reservoirs. Idaho has the most proposed habitat: 9,671 stream miles and 197,915 acres of lakes and reservoirs.
Of the proposed habitat,
more than half is on federal land, 36 on private land and 2
percent each on state and tribal lands. Critical habitat
designations
Baun said the critical
habitat designation does not affect land ownership or
establish a refuge, wilderness, reserve or preserve, and it
doesn’t allow government or public access to nonfederal
lands.
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