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 http://redding.com/news/editorial/past/20031025edt021.shtml

Klamath report spreads the pain of habitat repair

Bruce Ross


Published: October 25, 2003 in Editorial

The scientists examining the Klamath Basin water shortage and salmon die-off for the National Research Council have ruled, and the farmers are happy: It was not irrigation diversions that led to last fall's salmon die-off on the river.

In what is surely no coincidence, the US Fish and Wildlife Service also let slip out a report this week, and its scientists have ruled: Irrigation diversions delayed the salmon's migration, which allowed the spread of the disease that caused the die-off.

It appears that Olympian, objective science will not cure all our troubles, but the National Research Council report, compiled by a national panel of scientists, does serve up some painful hope. Are you ready?

All we need to do to heal the ailing chinook population is tear out a few dams (including Iron Gate, a hydroelectric producer, and Dwinnell, which creates Lake Shastina) more tightly control cattle grazing near streams, decrease logging along Klamath tributaries, buy groundwater to send downstream, and cut hatchery production of salmon so the wild fish can expand in their ecological niche. And that doesn't even start on helping the shortnosed suckers.

The council put a short-term price of $25 million to $35 million on the steps to help the salmon runs recover, but that seems to lowball the economic impacts.

Rather than shrink at the scope of the task, a better perspective is to marvel at the diverse ways to improve fish stocks. The Klamath Basin water shortage is a big, complex problem with solutions to match. The National Research Council report takes a refreshingly broad view of the debate.

Is it fish versus farms? Don't be petty. It's about the whole habitat. If it weren't for dozens of dams blocking spawning areas, the salmon would have a better shot. If the tributaries were healthier, the main-stem Klamath would flow cleaner and colder. There's even a techno-wonder solution for the suckers: injecting supplemental oxygen into Upper Klamath Lake to create a gill-friendly refuge when dying algae blooms suck the life out of the water.

Even the environmentalists agree that the report serves up smart solutions in the long run, though they question whether the fish populations will survive to appreciate them.

Maybe the big-picture thinking will trickle down. Could all the hostile energy in the Klamath Basin be redirected toward fixing broken habitat? Could farmers join with environmentalists in working to repair degraded stream banks? That sort of teamwork is what will save Klamath Basin agriculture. Are environmentalists willing to concede that the farms have a valuable place, and work toward preserving a threatened human type, the rough-handed Klamath horseradish grower?

Probably not. Bitter feuds leave legacies. But the National Research Council has handed anyone who really cares about improving the health of the basin, instead of scoring points, a long checklist to get to work on.


©2003-2003 Record Searchlight


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