http://www.siskiyoudaily.com/articles/2007/08/22/news/doc46cc6009c6880590549171.txt
Board discusses Klamath Watershed
By Jamie Gentner, Siskiyou Daily News 8/22/07
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HORNBROOK – Area residents from the Seiad Valley up
to the Oregon border converged at the Hornbrook Grange
on Monday, Aug. 20, for the first semi-annual community
meeting of the Upper Mid Klamath Watershed Council
Community Meeting.
The Watershed Council works to support watershed health,
community economic development, fire management,
recreation and other outdoor pursuits, according to Leo
Bergeron, chairman of the council’s Board of Directors.
“Our goal is to protect and enhance not only the
physical structure of the watershed, but also the status
of community,” he said. “We want to help make this an
economically viable community as well as a community
that protects the watershed.”
To start the meeting, Dr. Ken Rykbost, a retired
director of the Oregon State Klamath Experimental
Station (KES), gave a presentation entitled “Nutrient
Loading in the Klamath Basin.”
Rykbost worked in the Klamath Basin for 20 years and has
over 30 years experience studying and testing water and
water quality.
“This presentation will give vital information about the
area we live in,” Bergeron told those in attendance at
the meeting. “It will show how nature and man has an
effect on water quality.”
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The environmental issues facing the area are driven
by political and regulatory forces, Rykbost reported.
Some of those forces include such laws as the federal
Clean Water Act that requires 303D listings and TMDL
processes, Oregon Senate bill 1010 with its Private
Property Agricultural Management plans and the
Endangered Species Act.
Issues of concern in the upper Klamath include
phosphorous enrichment that supports blue-green algae,
pH levels above 9.0, dissolved oxygen levels below 4.0
mg/l, high ammonia concentrations and high temperatures.
The study conducted by KES and Klamath tribes from 1991
to 2000 “investigated nutrient loading from drainage of
agricultural lands adjacent to Klamath Lake, natural
background sources including major springs and several
artesian wells, and loading to the Klamath Irrigation
Project from diversions out of Klamath Lake and Klamath
River,” according to a text version of the presentation
on the KES Web site.
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The results were compared to other major studies
about nutrient loading by Miller and Tash of the United
States Geological Survey (USGS) in 1965-66, and Snyder
and Morace of the USGS in 1993-95.
The KES study found that their data was well within
range of data from previous studies, Rykbost’s
presentation concluded. Nutrients were almost as high,
even after cattle had been removed from one area.
“Findings indicate contributions from agricultural lands
adjacent to Klamath Lake have been overestimated, and
the Klamath Irrigation Project is probably a net sink
for nutrients diverted out of Klamath Lake and Klamath
River,” the online version of the study says.
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After his presentation, Rykbost answered questions.
“If blue-green algae is such a problem, why don’t we see
the deer being affected when they drink it all the
time,” one woman in attendance asked.
Rykbost reported that, throughout most of the year, the
concentration of the algae isn’t high enough to have
much of an affect on those drinking the water.
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“When it’s in high concentration, you definitely
don’t want to drink it, but most of the time there’s not
enough to do much harm,” he said. “That’s why
concentration levels need to be highly monitored.”
Rykbost also answered questions about odor, temperature
and the dams’ affect on nutrients.
Finally, he was asked about a solution to the problem.
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“The National Academy of Sciences committee met to
study these findings in 2001 ... and during that
meeting, the chair said that you won’t really be able to
get the phosphorous level low enough to get rid of the
blue-green algae completely,” he said. “So, we just have
to keep seeking solutions.”
Bergeron said the presentation and information Rykbost
provided was beneficial to those in attendance.
“The purpose of the presentation was an attempt to
educate the average person involved in the process and
dealing with the problems we are incurring today,” he
said. “I think he did an excellent job, especially in
providing the clarification that the blue-green algae is
a natural occurrence – that the source of phosphorous is
not purely an act of man but of nature.”
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The meeting continued, with the main agenda item
being an update on the progress of a watershed plan.
The council is seeking a grant from the Department of
Fish and Game to develop the plan that would look for
ways to support their goal of improving and protecting
the physical land, economic growth and people in the
area. The plan will be developed over a period of years.
A committee will be assembled to help guide the
direction of the plan, and the council board is
currently looking for community members interested in
serving on that board.
“Once we get the plan put together, we will take it to
the county Board of Supervisors and incorporate it into
their general plan,” Bergeron said. “That will ensure
everyone around the county is consistent.”
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Bergeron also reported on the accomplishments of the
board since the beginning of the year, which include
participating in the Federal Land Use Advisory Committee
meetings, speaking at the North Coast Regional Water
Quality Control Board meetings, writing letters to
Congress regarding several bills and more.
“We having just been sitting around having coffee and
tea; we’ve kept pretty busy,” Bergeron said. “But our
main thrust right now has to be this watershed plan.
Once we have that in place, we’ll have ground to work
from.”
The council meets the first Monday of every month at the
Hornbrook Grange at 6 p.m. Due to Labor Day, the council
will meet on Sept. 10 instead of Sept. 3.
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For more information about the Upper Mid Klamath
Watershed Council and their watershed plan, call
Bergeron at 842-4400.
To view the written document of Rykbost’s presentation,
visit www.oregonstate.edu/dept/kes.