[env-trinity] Folsom Lake rises to 44% of capacity after reaching record low of 14% in 2015
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Sun Jan 31 13:46:36 PST 2016
http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/1/30/1477398/-Folsom-Lake-rises-to-44-of-capacity-after-reaching-record-low-of-14-in-2015
This decomposing granite rock formation that I photographed over a
week ago is now under water at Folsom Lake. Photo by Dan Bacher.
Folsom Lake rises to 44% of capacity after reaching record low of 14%
in 2015
by Dan Bacher
Folsom Lake, the Sacramento metropolitan area’s backyard landlocked
king salmon, rainbow trout and black bass fishery, reached its lowest-
ever water level in November 2015 when it plunged to only 140,523 acre
feet of water, 14 percent of capacity. That surpasses the previous low
water level of 140,600 acre feet reached in November 1977.
However, over the past month the runoff from the long-anticipated El
Niño storms in the American River watershed has improved water
conditions at the reservoir dramatically. The lake is now holding
428,716 acre-feet of water, 44 percent of capacity and 84 percent of
average.
The water level has risen to 407.12 vertical feet in elevation, 58.88
feet from maximum pool. The reservoir has risen over 58 feet since
November.
Just to be clear, the record low level that the reservoir reached in
the fall of 2015 was just not because of drought – it was because of
the abysmal management of the reservoir during the drought by the U.S.
Bureau of Reclamation in conjunction with the California Department of
Water Resources (DWR).
During the past three years of drought, the Bureau and DWR
systematically emptied Trinity, Shasta, Oroville and Folsom reservoirs
to provide water to corporate agribusiness interests expanding their
almond tree acreage, Southern California water agencies, and oil
companies conducting water-polluting fracking and other extreme oil
extraction methods in Kern County.
Landlocked kings and rainbows get boost from rising water
Fishing for salmon, bass and trout has been slow for the past month,
due to cold, muddy water conditions, but it should get going strong
after the water level stabilizes this spring and the water clears up.
The rising water is expected to bring a lot of forage and nutrients
into the reservoir, providing great conditions this winter and spring
for king salmon, rainbow trout and black bass.
Last spring produced some of the best king salmon and rainbow trout
fishing at Folsom Lake in memory. In fact, trout fishing has been good
for both holdover rainbows and big kings during the last couple of
springs.
For example, Rob Bundy, his five-year-old son Drew and James Netzel of
Tight Lines Guide Service made a great trip to the lake last May. They
caught their limits, including two kings weighing 4-1/2 and 7 pounds,
and 13 beautiful holdover rainbows by 11 am.
Both the kings and rainbows hit Speedy Shiners, a favorite of
fishermen at Folsom, trolled at 20 to 35 feet deep in the South Fork.
The king salmon in Folsom Lake now are a mixture of wild fish spawned
in the South Fork of the American and fish planted by the California
Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW).
This should be a good year for salmon fishing at Folsom, since decent
numbers of the 99,990 inland Chinook fingerlings planted in 2014 and
the 29,955 planted in 2015 should show in the catches.
The number of salmon available for stocking this season is in
question, due to the relatively low Chinook salmon returns on the
Klamath River’s Iron Gate Fish Hatchery where the triploid (sterile)
salmon are raised.
“Our target is approximately 100,000 Chinook for Folsom, but the
inland program always comes secondary to the mitigation allotment for
the Klamath and we have to split the fish with the rest of the inland
waters,” said Jay Rowan, Acting Senior Hatchery Supervisor, North
Central Region-CDFW
“So in addition to having to have the fish to make the egg allotment,
there also isn’t a whole lot of information out there on triploiding
Chinook like there is for trout,” he noted. “The guys up at Iron Gate
and the other facilities that are hatching and rearing these fish are
doing a fantastic job writing the book on how to raise triploid
Chinook, but as would be expected, there have been and will continue
to be some ups and downs as they expand the science and refine
techniques,” he explained.
Rowan said some upcoming hatchery improvements at Iron Gate (filter
and UV systems) aimed at improving water quality should make some
significant improvements in egg to fry success.
“It wasn’t a fantastic year on the Klamath, so the numbers of fish
available for the inland program are lower than normal,” he noted.
“I’m not yet sure what our share will be for Folsom, but we should
receive some salmon. The good thing is those 2014 and 2015 fish should
be up to size and entering the creel this year.”
Chinooks spawn in South Fork of American River
The lake also hosts a unique population of naturally spawning
Chinooks, the progeny of salmon from the Nimbus Fish Hatchery.
Rowan said successful salmon spawning was first documented in 2009,
when anglers began bringing in some small king salmon that obviously
were the progeny of fish spawning in the forks of the American River
above the lake, since the lake hadn’t been planted since 2006, due to
the presence of IHN virus in the planted fish.
The CDFW did both snorkel and electroshocking surveys in 2010 that
documented the king salmon going up the South Fork to spawn.
“We did a couple of electrofishing surveys on the South Fork and
observed gravid (females headed upstream to spawn), “ he said. “We
also did snorkel surveys and saw around 90 salmon in the stretch from
the Salmon Falls Bridge up to Lotus, although we observes only two
fish on redds.”
Rainbow trout plants planned in 2016, but numbers and timing in question
The rainbow trout found in Folsom are mostly a mixture of holdover and
planted rainbows, along with some wild fish from the South and Middle
Forks of the American.
From the fall of 2013 to the spring of 2014, the CDFW planted 14,900
lbs of catchables between 1.7 and 1.0 fish per pound. The majority
were Eagle Lake Trout (ELT), plus 41,760 sub catchable ELTs. There
were no plants in the fall of 2014, due to the evacuation of the
American River Hatchery.
From January 15 to June 15 of 2015, the Department also planted 6,000
lbs catchable Shasta rainbow trout strain between 3.6 and 1.5 fish per
pound.
Rowan expects Folsom to be planted with rainbows again this season,
but when and how many fish are in question, due to the evacuation of
the American River and San Joaquin River Fish hatcheries during the
warm water and drought conditions last summer.
“With the evacuation of the American River and San Joaquin hatcheries,
we had the Moccasin Creek Hatchery trying their best to hold 3
facilities worth of fish. Because of that and to some extent budgets,
we’re short on overall numbers and particularly catchable size fish at
American River Hatchery,” said Rowan.
“We were able to hold some 60,000 rainbows in the chilled water in the
building and we transferred about 200,000 subcatchable and smaller
fish up from Moccasin,” said Rowan. “Some are small catchables right
now (almost 4 fish to the lb), but most are still too small to put out
as catchables.”
“We also obtained about 2,500 lbs of catchables from Moccasin for
urban lakes and kids events for this month and we’re working on
getting about 25,000 lbs from a couple of the SoCal hatcheries to help
us out with the high use waters that need winter/spring catchables.
Folsom will be included in that,” said Rowan.
He added, “If we don’t have to evacuate again this year we’ll try and
get some of our Eagle Lake Trout (ELT) fingerlings up to size and
plant them in Folsom this fall as subcatchables.”
I have fished Folsom since I was 10-years-old. It was where I caught
my first bluegill and largemouth bass when I was a child – and I have
caught hundreds of bluegill, rainbow trout, king salmon, spotted
largemouth and spotted bass and channel catfish in the many years
since I first fished the lake.
Let’s hope that the El Niño storms continue in force and fill up the
reservoir, resulting in great fishing and boating conditions this
coming spring, summer and fall!
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