[env-trinity] John Driscoll Eureka Times Standard on Klamath Fish Parasite
Byron
bwl3 at comcast.net
Tue Jun 22 10:33:42 PDT 2004
What's killing Klamath's fish? Thriving parasites may threaten salmon more
than ever
By John Driscoll The Times-Standard
Monday, June 21, 2004 -
Populations of salmon-killing parasites on the Klamath River appear to be
growing in recent years, and scientists are trying to get a grip on why the
problem is becoming so severe.
In the past five weeks, biologists have been sampling juvenile chinook
salmon and finding many of them infected with one or two parasites. One hits
the fishes' digestive tract, the other their kidneys.
While some suspect low flows and warm, poor-quality water are making the
fish more susceptible to the parasites, scientists are just beginning to
understand the scope of the problem. Some say the Klamath River is a system
so out of whack that the parasites have begun to flourish in ways not common
in parasite-host relationships.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife pathologist Scott Foott said it appears the high rate
of infection this year is a result of an exceedingly high dose of the
parasites.
The first parasite is Ceratomyxa shasta, which has been known to infect
between 12 and 40 percent of juvenile salmon in recent years. The other is
Parvicapsula minibicornis -- which has in the past been found in nearly all
juvenile salmon. This year, some 63 percent of the little fish are thought
to be affected so far.
Foott could not say whether the die-off compares to the 2000 juvenile fish
kill, when an estimated 200,000 succumbed to the diseases.
C. shasta's intermediate host is a freshwater worm, and a similar host may
hold P. minibicornis, though pathologists aren't sure.
While both crop up along the length of the river, the problem appears most
acute in the area just below the Klamath's lowermost dam, Iron Gate.
"We're thinking that the hot spot for infection is probably in the upper
reaches," Foott said.
Foott said he doesn't know why. But he said some have suggested that the
Klamath's flows are crimped by irrigation and hydropower at critical times
of the year. Winter and spring flows may have previously scoured many of the
intermediate hosts from the river, the hypothesis goes.
A graph of the river's historic flows -- still a disputed topic -- generated
from information by the National Marine Fisheries Service, shows a
bell-shaped curve. After the dams were built on the Klamath, the graph shows
more water coming down in late fall and winter, only to be cut back in the
spring when water for the federal government's upstream Klamath Irrigation
Project is stored.
Foott said scientists may have missed a chance to study how big winter and
spring flows affect the abundance of the parasites in 1997 and 1998, an el
Niño year that dumped huge amounts of rain and snow in the watershed.
Just two years later, though, more than 200,000 infected juvenile salmon
died in the river.
Portland, Ore.,-based PacifiCorps' hydropower dams also alter the river's
flow regime. The reservoirs behind the dams also act to enrich nutrients and
warm the already poor-quality river water let loose from Upper Klamath Lake.
That sparks algae blooms that turns the water alkaline and drops the amount
of dissolved oxygen in the lakes, according to research done by the Klamath
Basin Tribal Water Quality Work Group.
Salmon get stressed in such conditions, making them vulnerable to diseases.
California and Oregon water quality officials have said the conditions are
unacceptable.
In contrast, the disease rate in Klamath tributaries like the far-cleaner
Salmon and Trinity rivers are markedly lower.
PacifiCorps six dams now in the federal relicensing process, and lower river
proponents are pushing for a major investigation of the facilities' effects
on water quality.
'Serious problem'
This year was declared a dry year by the Reclamation Bureau. That was a
change from the initial "below average" forecast, which would have allowed
more water down the river. Through a multimillion-dollar water bank,
Reclamation is supplementing the flows this spring.
Reclamation spokesman Jeff McCracken said there is another 10,000 acre feet
-- 3.25 billion gallons -- available should state and federal wildlife
agencies request it. He said the bureau hasn't heard anything from the
agencies to date.
The California Department of Fish and Game is still mulling over whether to
use the water. While flows were cut back on Tuesday, and water temperatures
are climbing, Fish and Game Fisheries Program Manager Gary Stacey said the
relatively small amount of water might not do any good.
"There's not a whole heck of a lot of water to go around," Stacey said.
If water temperatures climb high enough to force the several million young
fish in the system to crowd into the cooler mouths of tributaries, Stacey
said, things could get worse. Temperatures above 70 degrees can cause the
parasites to multiply rapidly, especially in crowded conditions, putting
heat-stressed fish at even worse risk.
Water temperatures at Klamath Glen hit 68 degrees on Friday.
Fishermen are concerned that strung together, the 2000 fish kill, the 2002
adult fish kill that claimed 34,000 salmon, a spring die-off this year and
another potential adult fish kill this fall could put the brakes on
commercial, sport and tribal harvest.
The 2002 fish kill was caused by a protozoan infection commonly called ich
and a bacterial infection called columnaris. Fish and Wildlife found that
low, warm water held up migration of the fish in the lower river, leaving
them prone to infection.
"There's a serious problem in that basin," said Eureka commercial fisherman
Dave Bitts. "The signs are not good."
He said Reclamation is ignoring a key element: That its operations are set
up to prevent harm to threatened coho salmon, not chinook, which spend more
time in the main channel of the river.
The National Research Council, in its report on the Klamath, held the same
view.
As biologists try to piece together the disease complex, they are also faced
with the reality of inconsistent funding. Foott said scientists need to
figure out why C. shasta, for example, isn't found in Klamath tributaries
even though its spores are released after spawning fish die.
"It's not a well-funded effort at all," he said.
Reclamation may be beginning to feel the importance of the issue.
McCracken said the bureau is exploring the possibility of further funding
state, federal and tribal efforts to monitor the problem.
Byron Leydecker
Chair, Friends of Trinity River
Consultant, California Trout, Inc.
PO Box 2327
Mill Valley, CA 94942-2327
415 383 4810 ph
415 519 4810 ce
415 383 9562 fx
bwl3 at comcast.net
<mailto:bleydecker at stanfordalumni.org> bleydecker at stanfordalumni.org
(secondary)
http://www.fotr.org
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