Salmon return to lay eggs in historic habitat after largest dam removal project in US history
Source: AP
Updated 12:22 AM EST, November 17, 2024
A giant female Chinook salmon flips on her side in the shallow water and wriggles wildly, using her tail to carve out a nest in the riverbed as her body glistens in the sunlight. In another moment, males butt into each other as they jockey for a good position to fertilize eggs.
These are scenes local tribes have dreamed of seeing for decades as they fought to bring down four hydroelectric dams blocking passage for struggling salmon along more than 400 miles (644 kilometers) of the Klamath River and its tributaries along the Oregon-California border.
Now, less than a month after those dams came down in the largest dam removal project in U.S. history, salmon are once more returning to spawn in cool creeks that have been cut off to them for generations. Video shot by the Yurok Tribe show that hundreds of salmon have made it to tributaries between the former Iron Gate and Copco dams, a hopeful sign for the newly freed waterway.
Seeing salmon spawning above the former dams fills my heart, said Joseph L. James, chairman of the Yurok Tribe. Our salmon are coming home. Klamath Basin tribes fought for decades to make this day a reality because our future generations deserve to inherit a healthier river from the headwaters to the sea. The Klamath River flows from its headwaters in southern Oregon and across the mountainous forests of northern California before it reaches the Pacific Ocean.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/klamath-dam-removal-salmon-spawning-4240169b4bfa327a6a67383ab536e971
Botany
(72,665 posts)Btw the Biden administration is supporting doing this for all the major rivers in
the Pacific Northwest too. Expect those plans to be scuttled.
FakeNoose
(36,019 posts)2naSalit
(93,505 posts)pfitz59
(10,991 posts)Trump's cabinet picks will have a chance to royally screw this effort.
calimary
(84,612 posts)And not only that, but MORE PEOPLE FOR the Resistance!
CountAllVotes
(21,104 posts)Wild blueberry
(7,272 posts)Thank you.
liberalla
(10,091 posts)This really is something to celebrate.
Dr. Shepper
(3,082 posts)To be shown videos and photos of the rivers during spawning season from the late 1800s/early 1900s. They were so thick with salmon it looked like you could walk on water.