Testimony of Dr. William
Lewis, U.S. House of Representatives, House Committee on
Natural Resources, Subcommittee on Water and Power
July 31, 2007 by William Lewis,
chair of the National
Research Council (NRC) Committee on Endangered and Threatened
Fishes in the Klamath River Basin (“Klamath Committee”)
between 2002 and 2004.
My name is William
Lewis. I am employed by the University of Colorado at Boulder,
where I am Professor of Biology and Director of the Center for
Limnology within the Cooperative Institute for Research in
Environmental Sciences. My field of specialization is inland
waters, including lakes, streams, rivers, and wetlands.
The National Research Council (NRC) is the operating arm of
the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and the National
Academy of Engineering (NAE). The NRC forms and manages
committees under policies and guidelines set by NAS. Between
the 1970s and the present, I have been a member or chair of
several NRC committees. Between 2002 and 2004, I was chair of
the Committee on Endangered and Threatened Fishes in the
Klamath River Basin (“Klamath Committee”). The work of the
committee, as defined by its statement of task, was to review
documents prepared by agencies of the federal government
regarding effects of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s Klamath
Project, which manages water for irrigation, on three fish
species in the Klamath River Basin that are listed as
threatened (coho salmon) or endangered (shortnose sucker, Lost
River sucker) under the Endangered Species Act. The
committee’s study was sharply focused on the scientific basis
of agency decisions through which the Endangered Species Act
was being implemented in the Klamath Basin. The work of the
committee is described in its final report, which was
published by NAS in 2004.
The Klamath Committee considered the possibility, as proposed
by the US Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine
Fisheries Service, that new restrictions on operations of the
USBR’s Klamath Project could offer significant benefits both
to the endangered suckers and threatened coho salmon. After
studying valuable information collected by federal agencies
and others, the committee concluded that stricter operating
requirements for the Klamath Project, as proposed by the ESA
implementation agencies (USFWS, NMFS), would be unlikely to
benefit the ESA-listed species. This conclusion was reached by
the committee on a scientific basis, without any consideration
of economic or political factors, as directed by the
committee’s scope of work. The incidental effect of the
conclusion, however, was to call into question a tightening of
water management for the Klamath Project that would have
caused significant and frequent shortfalls of water delivery
to agricultural water users.
In considering documents prepared by the federal agencies and
others, the committee also concluded that a proposal prepared
by the USBR, if approved, would have left operations of the
Klamath Project open to a wider range of water use than had
been the case in the recent historical past. The committee
noted that intensifying water management in this way could not
be supported scientifically because more intensive water
management had not been studied environmentally. Therefore,
while the committee could not find reasons for new
restrictions on water management, it also could not find a
scientific basis for a greater latitude of water management
than had been in place for the preceding decade.
Because the biological opinions issued by the ESA
implementation agencies made reference to numerous factors
other than water management that might be affecting the listed
species, the committee considered all other possible causes
for failure of the listed species to recover. For each of the
species, the committee found compelling arguments for numerous
kinds of remediation that could be effective in improving the
likelihood of recovery for the species. Options identified by
the committee include removal of small dams, restoration of
cool water to tributaries, experimental elimination of heavy
stocking of non-endangered species, restoration of streamside
vegetation and woody debris, and numerous others. Some of
these measures have been undertaken since the committee
finished its work.
Circumstances leading to the creation of the Klamath Committee
followed a pattern that is typical for NRC committees formed
under direction of the NAS. Within the Klamath Basin, the US
Bureau of Reclamation is responsible for operating the Klamath
Project for the benefit of private irrigators, and the US Fish
and Wildlife Service has the responsibility of implementing
the requirements of the ESA for non-migratory fish species.
Both of these agencies are administered by the Department of
the Interior. Over years of study and debate leading to
increasing degrees of restriction on the USBR’s water
management practices for the benefit of endangered suckers,
the two agencies had reached a critical point at which the
USBR strenuously objected on technical and scientific grounds
to further restrictions on its management of the Klamath
Project. Furthermore, the National Marine Fisheries Service of
the Commerce Department, which administers ESA requirements
for anadromous migratory fishes, including coho salmon, was
also calling for increased stringency of water management
based on welfare of coho, again in opposition to the USBR’s
analysis of the probable benefits of increased restrictions.
Thus, three agencies of the federal government were involved
in a scientific and technical dispute with substantial
potential consequences both for endangered species and for
agricultural water use and its economic derivatives.
Assistance in resolution of this problem by nonpolitical means
is exactly the type of task for which the National Academy of
Sciences, which is not a government agency, was created. The
Academy has been a consistent source of independent analysis
and review on scientific and technical matters of importance
to the federal government for over a century. In other words,
the formation of an NRC committee to examine the scientific
and technical issues related to endangered fishes in the
Klamath Basin was well justified and timely, with no
detectable overtones of partisan political motivation.
Over the many decades that have elapsed since its formation by
Congressional Charter in 1863, the National Academy has
developed procedures insuring that the work of its committees
will not be influenced politically or by any other means not
related to an independent and factual examination of
scientific and technical information. The safeguards are
numerous and have proven highly effective. They include the
following:
1) NAS does not accept a committee charge that directs the
committee to reach specific conclusion or type of conclusion,
2) NAS populates its committees with individuals who come from
varied backgrounds, have varied expertise relevant to the
problem at hand, and have established national and
international reputations as experts in their fields, 3) while
the committee collects evidence and opinions in open meetings,
it is insulated from external pressure during its
deliberations, 4) NRC committees are directed to prepare a
report containing conclusions that can be approved by all
committee members, and not just a majority of members, 5) NRC
committee reports are reviewed anonymously by as many as 10-15
experts who give anonymous opinions that must be considered by
the committee and either rebutted effectively or reflected in
revisions of the report, 6) the report and revisions to NRC
reports are overseen in detail by two officials representing
the interest of the NAS in the integrity of the report, 7)
final reports must be approved by the chair of the NAS Report
Review Committee, 8) members of NRC committees formed by the
NAS are not compensated, 9) committees are dissolved when
their task is completed; they do not have lasting influence
except through their final report, 10) committee members are
rigorously screened for conflict of interest and bias.
During 2002, while the committee was conducting its work, the
Klamath Basin was experiencing a severe drought, and in early
fall there was a mass mortality of adult salmon at the mouth
of the Klamath River. The federal agencies sponsoring the NRC
Klamath study requested specifically that this incident of
mortality be addressed by the committee as an addendum to its
statement of task. Mass mortality of salmon at the mouth of
the Klamath attracted much attention to the work of the
Klamath Committee.
The mass mortality of 2002 involved the death of a conservatively estimated 32,897 salmon. Three hundred forty-four
(1%) were coho; 32,553 (99%) were fall-run Chinook salmon out
of a run of approximately 170,000 fall-run Chinook. Coho
salmon in the Klamath are listed under the ESA, and the NMFS
is charged to protect them from any unnatural mortality.
The immediate cause of death of the salmon was massive
infection by bacterial and protozoan disease agents. These
disease agents are common and cause mortality of fish that are
stressed or crowded.
The salmon that died in 2002 were gathered in a dense mass at
the mouth of the Klamath in preparation for group migration up
the main stem of the Klamath. This is an annual phenomenon and
would not be considered unusual. The salmon await favorable
conditions for migration. A typical trigger for upstream
migration is a cool pulse in flow, the natural cause of which
would be precipitation in the lower part of the basin. Because
the weather was extraordinarily dry, it appears that this
pulse did not come, and the prolonged crowding of the salmon
led to the mass mortality.
An important question considered by the committee and many
others is whether management of water by the Klamath Project
was responsible for withholding the pulse of flow that would
have allowed the salmon to migrate. The NRC committee
concluded that this is very unlikely. The Klamath Project is
located over 150 miles upstream from the mouth, and water
flowing through the Klamath Project accounts for only 10% of
the total flow at the mouth; large tributaries entering the
river below the Klamath Project contribute most of the flow at
the mouth. Furthermore, the Klamath Project releases water
that is warm because it comes from storage lakes rather than
reaching the stream through groundwater or surface runoff. The
committee concluded that a relatively small amount of warm
water propagated over a distance of 150 miles would not have
made a critical difference to the salmon that were staging for
migration at the mouth of the river.
The committee also examined previous conditions and found that
low flows similar to those of 2002 had occurred in several
years within the period of record without any accompanying
salmon mortality. The committee therefore concluded that
mortality was the result of an unusual combination of
conditions, probably including unusually low flow plus the
absence of a cool pulse of flow that even a brief
precipitation event might have provided.
In summary, formation of the Klamath Committee in 2002
followed a series of events that is typical for formation of
NRC committees by the NAS: conflict over technical or
scientific issues within agencies of the federal government
leading to a need for opinions from an independent body, which
often is the NAS. Once formed through the NRC by NAS,
committees are managed so that their findings cannot be
manipulated politically, nor would committee members continue
to serve in the face of manipulation. |