[env-trinity] Guest Comment: Salmon Memorial, Sacramento News & Review
Daniel Bacher
danielbacher at hotmail.com
Thu Oct 7 16:52:23 PDT 2004
Here's my "Guest Comment," titled "Salmon memorial," in today's issue of
Sacramento News & Review (10/7). It's archived online at
http://www.newsreview.com/issues/Sacto/2004-10-07/guest.asp
Guest Comment
Salmon memorial
By Dan Bacher
The American River is a treasure that winds its way through the heart of the
Sacramento metropolitan area. It plays host to large annual migrations of
king salmon, steelhead, shad and striped bass every year, making it one of
the most popular recreational fisheries in the country.
Unfortunately, biologists from the California Department of Fish and Game
are expecting a massive fish kill of fall-run chinook salmon on the American
River this year because of lethally warm water conditions. There is little
cold water left in Folsom Reservoir because the Bureau of Reclamation
continues to follow a management plan for Folsom that favors agribusiness
and other water users over fish.
In the past three years, a total of 181,709 adult salmon died before
spawning, surpassing even the Klamath River fish kill of 2002, where as many
as 68,000 salmon perished. The Americans fish died because of lethally warm
water conditions.
Thirty-seven percent of the run of 2003--58,651 out of 158,516 returning
adult chinooks--died before spawning, according to Mike Healey, Department
of Fish and Game associate fishery biologist. The vast majority of these
fish were natural spawners. In the fall of 2001, 87,626 fish (67 percent of
the run) died before spawning.
The annual fish kills are expected to continue until adequate water flow and
temperature standards are adopted on the American. The Save the American
River Association (SARA), United Anglers, the California Sportfishing
Protection Alliance, the Sacramento Valley Water Forum and other groups are
supporting the adoption of water standards to protect fisheries and restore
the river.
The water forum produced a draft document in January 2004 that it would like
the State Water Resources Control Board to consider in 2005. The problem is
that the bureau wants a permanent dedication of b2 flows--water dedicated
to fish and wildlife under federal water reform legislation--if it is to
support the standards. Conservation groups contend that the use of this
water is supposed to be determined by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
annually, based on changing needs and conditions.
The time for adoption of flow and temperature standards is long overdue. As
Allen Wade, SARA president, said, We dont want to turn the annual Salmon
Festival into a memorial every year. For more information, contact SARA at
(916) 387-1763.
Dan Bacher is managing editor of Elk Grove's The Fish Sniffer magazine and
board member of United Anglers of California
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