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Auggie

(31,798 posts)
Sun Mar 3, 2024, 06:39 AM Mar 2024

Historic California dam removal, meant to help salmon, sees massive die-off

San Francisco Chronicle . March 3, 2024

Hundreds of thousands of young salmon are believed to have died this week at the site of a historic dam removal project on the Klamath River, after an effort to restore salmon runs on the newly unconstrained river went awry, the Chronicle has learned.

The dead chinook salmon were among the first hatchery fish released on the Klamath since four hydroelectric dams were breached near the California-Oregon border, to allow the river to flow freely again and ultimately help fish flourish. One of the dams has been fully removed, and the three others are scheduled to come out later this year.

The salmon die-off, discovered downstream of the 173-foot Iron Gate Dam, is thought to be the result of trauma the small fish experienced when they went through a tunnel at the dam’s base, which had been opened to allow the river to pass and dam demolition to proceed. Water pressure in the outlet tunnel was presumably too great, causing the fish to die of what appears to be gas bubble disease, California officials told the Chronicle.

“No one, especially those in my program who work night and day to keep fish alive, wants to see something like this happen,” said Jason Roberts, an environmental program manager for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. “We’re going to learn from it. We need to do better.”

Link (paywall): https://www.sfchronicle.com/california/article/klamath-dams-salmon-die-off-18700078.php

According to the link, about 830,000 hatchery-raised chinook were released. Each was roughly 1 to 2 inches long, the majority of which died or probably soon will.

Excellent intention, nightmare result.

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Auggie

(31,798 posts)
2. If you mean don't build dams in the first place, yes
Sun Mar 3, 2024, 07:07 AM
Mar 2024

But it sounds to me like one massive fuck-up -- not accounting for what might have killed the hatchlings: gas bubble disease, caused by high water pressure.

Think. Again.

(17,955 posts)
3. Yes, don't build structures that disrupt habitat in the first place, AND...
Sun Mar 3, 2024, 07:26 AM
Mar 2024

....be sure to account for the safety and protection of wildlife when making any changes to those structures after they're built.

modrepub

(3,612 posts)
4. A FU? Sure
Sun Mar 3, 2024, 09:27 AM
Mar 2024

but we're only human. Mistakes are made. Learn from them, adjust and move forward.

The overall goal is to get the species back to historic levels. Removing dams and allowing for unrestricted movement should help in the long run.

Too many times folks pile on when things go wrong. Change is messy; that's why it's so hard sometimes.

Wonder Why

(4,589 posts)
7. Once again, mankind steps in to change mother nature and She says "you're too stupid".
Sun Mar 3, 2024, 03:05 PM
Mar 2024

They put in a dam. They mess up Mother Nature.

They take it out but don't do it right. They mess up Mother Nature.

If they put women in charge, would they do better? They can't do worse!

IcyPeas

(22,613 posts)
8. Emptying the reservoirs exposed vast tracts of unsightly mud that has sent silt and decaying algae downriver...
Sun Mar 3, 2024, 07:07 PM
Mar 2024

From the link:

The emptying of the three large reservoirs behind the dams in January has exposed vast tracts of unsightly mud that has sent silt and decaying algae downriver and turned the water a striking brown. Dead perch, crappie, bass and other mostly nonnative fish were left scattered in the drained lakebeds while some critics worried that salmon would not be able to migrate up the murky river.

Project managers have dismissed the allegations as “mischaracterizations” of what’s happening. They’ve repeatedly said that what has been observed, excluding this week’s salmon die-off, was exactly what was expected.

Planning documents projected that 5 million to 7 million cubic yards of sediment would be unleashed from the reservoirs, turbidity would increase and dissolved oxygen levels would drop in the river for several months and nonnative fish unaccustomed to cold river flows would die.
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