H&N photo by Lee Juillerat
by Lee Juillerat, Herald and News 8/12/09
A dizzying array of stilts, bald eagles, yellow-headed blackbirds, pelicans, gulls, avocets, grebes, great blue herons, Caspian terns and more fly overhead, bunch-up in trees and shrubs, or float like rafts on wetlands.
Anglers sitting in parked boats cast for trout and enjoy the summer day while fishers of another sort, osprey, periodically hover, dive and, more often than not, fly away clutching a meal in their talons.
“I hope that’s not a sucker,” says Heather Hendrixson, the preserve director for the Williamson River Delta Preserve, a 7,500-acre area owned by The Nature Conservancy that mostly borders the Williamson River as its weaves its final miles to Upper Klamath Lake.
Protecting
habitat
Protecting and providing good habitat for
suckers is why the preserve exists. While it
feels as though the wetlands and lake fringe
habitat have always been here, steps taken over
the past two years have significantly altered
and reshaped the landscape.
In October 2007, nearly 100 tons of explosives
were used to breach four levees that had been
part of the former Tulana Farms operations.
Each of the breaches was a half-mile wide, a
startling distance made real when viewing one of
the openings marked by trees at both ends of the
remaining levees.
Last October more openings were created in a
less dramatic fashion with heavy equipment that
unplugged sections of adjacent Goose Bay.
Crews have also scraped levees, leaving them low
enough that they disappear during spring’s high
water, and high enough that they emerge as mud
flats or linear islands when Upper Klamath
Lake’s water levels seasonally drop by
mid-summer.
What can’t easily be seen are schools of young
shortnosed and Lost River suckers, two
endangered species.
Improving numbers
Hendrixson, a fisheries biologist, terms efforts
to improve the suckers’ habitat as a work in
progress, but says indications point to success
in improving the numbers of larval, or very
young, fish.
“To say what effect on sucker populations is
going be, we have to wait for a few years,” she
says, adding that early studies indicate the
endangered fish are living and breeding in areas
reopened by breaching. “It’s been really neat,
seeing the fish, seeing the vegetation and
seeing all the birds come back.”
7,500 acres
While the preserve spans 7,500 acres, about
5,500 acres have been flooded, including about
3,500 acres in wetlands. Another 800 acres
remain in production. Leaseholder Jim Gallagher
is growing organic alfalfa.
“It’s hard to appreciate the magnitude of the
change,” says Mark Stern, the Klamath
conservation area director, who’s been involved
with efforts to return the area to its former
conditions for more than a dozen years.
Historically, Stern says, the Williamson River
Delta was a sprawling expanse of marsh and
lake-fringe habitat. That changed in the 1950s
when landowners began building levees to create
farmlands.
In the 1990s, because of concerns about
disappearing sucker populations, returning those
lands to their natural condition became a goal
of the Hatfield Upper Basin Working Group, a
coalition of citizens and government groups
formed to protect and restore wetlands.
The Nature Conservancy bought Tulana Farms in
1996 and neighboring Goose Bay in 1999.
Breaching the entire 22 miles of levees is
economically impossible, so water flow studies
were used to identify sections that could be
blown or mechanically carved to best create
wetlands.
“The wetlands have responded really well,” Stern
says of the abundant birds, vegetation and, most
importantly to him, suckers. “The ingredient
seems to be, add water.”
There are no plans to breach more levees, but
Hendrixson believes the delta will continue to
naturally change.
“I don’t think they’ll every be an end-point
where they say it’s complete because it’s always
changing and evolving,” Hendrixson says.
The Nature Conservancy’s
role
The Nature Conservancy paid $5,933.67 in Klamath
County property taxes last year for the
Williamson River Delta property, according to
Stephen Anderson, the group’s communications
director.
The Conservancy’s total tax payments to Klamath
County, including the Sycan Marsh Preserve, were
$9,526.11.
Klamath County commissioners had expressed a
desire the properties that are part of the
Williamson River Delta remain in private
ownership to ensure property tax payments would
continue. Although the Conservancy is eligible
to not pay, Anderson says annual taxes are paid
to benefit local communities.