Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Dr. Ken
Rykbost presentation in Yreka at the
Greenhorn Grange October 20, 1006 on Nutrient
Loading in the Upper Klamath Basin
Nutrient Loading of Surface Waters in the Upper Klamath Basin: Agricultural and Natural Sources, by Dr. Ken Rykbost, Superintendent Professor, and B.A. Charlton, Faculty Research Assistant, Klamath Experiment Station, Klamath Falls, Oregon, Following are notes by Katherine Lehman, PFUSA, 10/29/06 A good point he made was that every acre taken out of ag. prod. and put into wetlands will use more water than ag. does.
He talked about the 16,000 acres of leased land (ag.
prod.) within the Tulelake Wildlife Refuge would
be three feet under water without the dikes.
He talked about the 100,000 acre feet of the Lost
Lake Slough in the 70's and 80's that took water
from the Upper Klamath Lake and put it into Lost
Lake, NOT down the river.
He countered the notion (stated as fact by Gang
Greed) that wetlands are sponges, when in fact
they produce their own nutrients.........just at a
different time of year.
He, of course, destroyed the BiOps requirement of
high lake level at UKL.........citing 90's levels
of 4136.8, and 4137.0 WITHOUT FISH KILLS.
He talked about the phosphorus and nitrogen(?)
coming from the springs around the basin,
including the ones underneath UKL. He said the P
and N levels in the artesian wells of the Wood
River Ranch mean you could grow crops
hydroponically w/o adding any P and N......which
are significant amounts of naturally occuring P
and N.
He talked about the algae bloom spikes in July and
Sept., in the UKL, from the algae blooms are from
the naturally-occuring P and N levels, NOT runoff
from ag. prod. Actually, the utrophic nature of
the basin, and the naturally-occuring
nutrients load 180,000 pounds of P into the
project, and 2,000,000 pounds of N, with a net
sink of 80,000 pounds of P in the project each
year.
One last point...........he also pointed out that
the Tui Chub's diet includes phytoplankton that
combat blue-green algae overgrowth.
I asked Ken if anyone has ever studied the amount
of nitrogen the geese, and other waterfowl,
contribute to the Basin. Of course, they have
not...........and with it only requiring, what is
it, 32 geese per steer (?), that amount would be
significant.
Kathy Lehman
For Rykbost's biography, go HERE For Dr Rykbost power point presentation on Dr. Hardy science in the biological opinion, go HERE
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