Scientists
offer Klamath remedies
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Scientists offer Klamath remedies
A panel says some dams must be removed and wetlands
restored, but that taking water from farms would not
help fish recover
10/22/03
MICHAEL MILSTEIN
Farmers who went dry in the Klamath Basin's 2001
drought found vindication Tuesday from a national
panel of scientists who insist the solution to
Klamath's protracted water struggles lies not in
irrigation shutoffs but in sweeping repairs to an
out-of-balance landscape.
The National Research Council, in a final and
exhaustive report released Tuesday, says federal
agencies must remove dams that impede fish
migration, restore vital wetlands, and return clean,
cool water to rivers and lakes if the fish are to
recover.
Federal agencies instead have focused on the easier
target of the federal Klamath Project that supports
more than 1,000 farms.
In the severe drought of 2001 federal biologists
reserved so much water for suckers in Upper Klamath
Lake and coho salmon in the Klamath River that most
farms watched crops wither. But there is no evidence
it did the fish any good, said the panel of 12
scientists assembled at the request of Interior
Secretary Gale Norton.
"There was one knob they could turn, and that was
the one on the project," said Jeffrey Mount, a
professor at the University of California at Davis
who served on the panel. "The committee doesn't
believe that will solve the problem."
The long-awaited report carries great weight for the
Klamath Basin, as both the Bush administration and
Congress said they would look to it for guidance in
resolving the region's persistent and emotionally
charged water struggles. It follows a preliminary
report last year that found the 2001 water cutoff
was unjustified.
Their report also says diversion of water to farms
last year cannot by itself be blamed for last fall's
historic die-off of more than 33,000 salmon in the
lower Klamath River in Northern California.
It says the causes and solutions of the long-term
decline of fish extend far beyond the Klamath
Project.
"This makes clear to all fair-minded people that the
bull's-eye should never have been put on the
farmers," said Sen. Gordon Smith, R-Ore. "The
solutions to recovering these fish must come through
collaboration, and not just confrontation with
farmers."
He said he would ask the Bush administration to
adopt the report's recommendations.
Norton said the Interior Department is reviewing the
report.
"We agree with the council that the recovery of coho
salmon and the two (species of) suckers cannot be
achieved through actions primarily focused on the
Klamath Project but require a broader approach that
includes the participation of a wide range of
stakeholders in the basin," she said.
The findings support Klamath farmers, who contend
they have borne more than their share of the burden
for aiding the fish. But the panel also echoed many
calls by tribes and environmental groups for repair
of eroding riverbanks, dammed streams and other
obstacles to recovery of the fish.
"If there's one central theme, it's that the
failures of the past are the result of not taking an
ecosystem approach," Mount said.
Among the panel's recommendations: Rapidly remove
Chiloquin Dam, which blocks access to some 90
percent of historic sucker spawning habitat on the
Sprague River above the town of Chiloquin. Also,
remove small dams and diversions throughout the
tributaries of the Klamath River to open more
spawning habitat for threatened coho salmon. Boost
oxygen levels in Upper Klamath Lake to improve
conditions for endangered suckers in the broad,
shallow lake. Eliminate stocked game fish in Lake of
the Woods west of Klamath Falls and reintroduce
suckers there. Expand lakes and wetlands within the
Klamath wildlife refuges in Northern California,
which could flood land used for farming, to provide
more habitat for endangered suckers there. Shut down
a fish hatchery at Iron Gate Dam in Northern
California to halt the release of fish that may
compete with threatened coho salmon in the Klamath
River. Evaluate the possible removal of Iron Gate
Dam on the Klamath River and Dwinnell Dam on the
Shasta River, because they block large reaches of
coho salmon habitat. Alter logging, grazing and
other land management practices to prevent erosion
and other damage to coho habitat.
The cost of the actions over the next five years
would total $25 million to $35 million, excluding
major projects such as removal of Chiloquin Dam. But
panel members said it's clear that Chiloquin Dam, a
low diversion dam that is no longer essential to
agriculture, must come out.
"When we saw that and saw what it was doing, we were
all looking at each other saying, 'Why wasn't this
out of here 10 years ago?' " Mount said.
Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., has championed removal of
the dam and has pushed for funding to begin
disassembling it. He said Tuesday the Bush
administration also supports the action.
"This report gives us a good road map for what needs
to be done," Walden said.
The scientific panel said federal agencies must look
beyond Upper Klamath Lake to restore the sucker
population. Conditions in the lake itself have
deteriorated to such a degree it may be virtually
impossible to prevent continuing algae blooms that,
when they decay, cause toxic conditions for fish.
Environmental groups found the report a mixed bag.
Although they praised the recommendations to
consider removing dams and restore wetlands in the
national wildlife refuges, they said more water
needs to be reserved for fish until those steps are
fulfilled.
If steps are not taken to repair the Klamath
ecosystem, conditions would worsen, said Peter
Moyle, a University of California at Davis,
professor who also served on the panel. That would
lead to more crises like the cutoff of water in
2001.
"The Klamath Project can't solve all the problems of
the watershed," said Dan Keppen of the Klamath Water
Users Association. "I'm hoping people will say,
'Let's put the blame game behind us and let's deal
with the real problems together.' "
Michael Milstein: 503-294-7689; michaelmilstein@news.oregonian.com
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