29 min

Dam Removal is Sometimes Messy (But Worth It‪)‬ EcoNews Report

    • News

Klamath River dam removal is underway, with drawdown of the three largest reservoirs occurring now and physical removal of these dam structures scheduled for this summer. The dams have impacted the river for over a hundred years and dam removal has its own environmental impacts. While fish biologists and water quality scientists are confident that the long-term benefits will outweigh the short-term impacts, a loud group of dam removal antagonists have glommed onto the ‘messy’ part of this massive ecosystem restoration project — temporary increases in suspended sediment and associated impacts to water quality and the recent mortality event of hatchery juvenile salmon— to continue their fight against dam removal.
Luckily, Toz Soto, Senior Fisheries Biologist with the Karuk Tribe, and Dr. Maia Singer, Senior Scientist at Stillwater Sciences, join the show to help sort fact from fiction.
For more information about Klamath Dam removal, check out:
Lower Klamath Project – Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) | California State Water Resources Control Board
Klamath Dam Removal Overview Report for the Secretary of the Interior an Assessment of Science and Technical Information, Version 1.1, March 2013 | FWS.gov
Klamath Dam Removal Studies | U.S. Geological Survey (usgs.gov)
Klamath River Renewal (klamathrenewal.org)
Klamath Basin Monitoring Program
Support the Show.

Klamath River dam removal is underway, with drawdown of the three largest reservoirs occurring now and physical removal of these dam structures scheduled for this summer. The dams have impacted the river for over a hundred years and dam removal has its own environmental impacts. While fish biologists and water quality scientists are confident that the long-term benefits will outweigh the short-term impacts, a loud group of dam removal antagonists have glommed onto the ‘messy’ part of this massive ecosystem restoration project — temporary increases in suspended sediment and associated impacts to water quality and the recent mortality event of hatchery juvenile salmon— to continue their fight against dam removal.
Luckily, Toz Soto, Senior Fisheries Biologist with the Karuk Tribe, and Dr. Maia Singer, Senior Scientist at Stillwater Sciences, join the show to help sort fact from fiction.
For more information about Klamath Dam removal, check out:
Lower Klamath Project – Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) | California State Water Resources Control Board
Klamath Dam Removal Overview Report for the Secretary of the Interior an Assessment of Science and Technical Information, Version 1.1, March 2013 | FWS.gov
Klamath Dam Removal Studies | U.S. Geological Survey (usgs.gov)
Klamath River Renewal (klamathrenewal.org)
Klamath Basin Monitoring Program
Support the Show.

29 min

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