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High Water?
#1
Wish we had a fishery biologist on here that understands this stuff and could explain what the spring hydralics do to fish in the rivers and those trying to migrate up them?


Interesting article from cnn.com:

Hundreds of thousands of fish in the Columbia River are dying from the bends.

That's the layman's explanation. Here's the detailed one.

A large winter snow melt is forcing the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, which runs the Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia in Washington state, to increase water flows through the dam. The turbulent water is releasing gases, including nitrogen gas, which is what causes the bends in scuba divers when they surface too quickly. Gas levels have been more than 130% of normal recently, [url "http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2015160495_fishkill27m.html"][#004276]the Seattle Times reports[/#004276][/url].

"We've easily got hundreds of thousands of dead fish," Bill Clark told the Seattle paper. He works for Pacific Aquaculture, which farms steelhead trout in nets in the river.

Pacific Aquaculture's parent company, Pacific Seafood, says it is losing 100,000 fish a day from the 2.7 million still living on the farm in the river 20 miles south of the Grand Coulee, according to [url "http://blog.seattlepi.com/seattlepolitics/2011/05/26/hi-flow-in-columbia-trout-die-salmon-o-k/"][#004276]a report on SeattlePI.com[/#004276][/url].

Bureau officials concede the gas problem is likely to get worse, but they say wild fish shouldn't have the problems that farmed ones do because they can dive deeper into the river to escape the gases, according to the Times report.

Pacific Aquaculture manager John Bielka doesn't see it that way.

"They're basically sterilizing this entire stretch of river," Bielka told the Times. "That's going to wipe out not only the fish in our farm, but also the bull trout, the lamprey, the sturgeon and every other wild thing."

Bureau officials told the Times they have no alternative - there's simply too much melting snow that would cause flooding if the dam flow were lessened.

"In a normal year, this wouldn't be a big problem. But Mother Nature is running the Columbia River right now," the Times quoted Charles Hudson of the Columbia River Intertribal Fish Commission as saying.

The increased water flow is having at least one positive effect, according to the SeattlePI report. It's helping juvenile salmon get downstream to the Pacific Ocean quicker.
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#2
Sounds like a real Catch 22. They have to get the water out for the above average snowpack but unfortunately at the expense of the fishery. The Snake is running high with a good possibility of flooding here in Idaho along with the Boise, Payette, Weiser, Salmon and other feeders that may cause flooding which also dump into the Snake. And of course the Snake dumps into the Columbia. Not a good scenario.
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