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Tag Archives: Shasta River
The folly of unimpaired flows for water quality management
by Ann Willis Unimpaired streamflow has long been the benchmark against which current stream flows are evaluated for environmental purposes. The underlying assumption is that if there is water in a stream, the stream must be healthy. A closer look … Continue reading
Posted in California Water
Tagged Ann Willis, environmental flows, Klamath River, Shasta River, water quality, water temperature
4 Comments
Fish managers tasked with ranching? Conservation wins
by Ann Willis In May, the Wildlife Conservation Board (WCB) approved $2.4M for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) to acquire Shasta Big Springs Ranch on the Shasta River, a tributary to the Klamath River. This follows a … Continue reading
Posted in Agriculture, Conservation, Planning and Management, reconciliation, Sustainability
Tagged Ann Willis, Klamath River, Shasta River
2 Comments
The Little Shasta River: A model for sustaining our national heritage
by Ann Willis, Rob Lusardi, Alex Hart, Susan Hart, Blair Hart, Andrew Braugh, Amy Campbell, Ada Fowler Rancher: farms. Conservationist: fish. Researcher: science. Too often, identity is used to divide us. Stereotypes are used to stake out conflicting positions. It’s … Continue reading
Posted in Agriculture, Conservation, Fish, reconciliation, Restoration, Sustainability
Tagged Ann Willis, Klamath River, Little Shasta, Robert Lusardi, Shasta River
6 Comments
Science takes flight: aerial imagery provides new opportunities and insights
By Devon Lambert Remote sensing is all the rage as we start the New Year, largely due to its ability to exponentially increase our areas of analysis for research. What used to take us weeks to survey with traditional field … Continue reading
Posted in Biology, Planning and Management, Salmon, Tools, Uncategorized
Tagged Devon Lambert, Klamath River, remote sensing, Shasta River
2 Comments
Creeks that cool down as summer heats up
By Ann Willis and Andrew Nichols Summer has just begun and conditions on many of California’s drought-stricken rivers and streams are already looking grim for cold-water fish. Endangered winter-run salmon may not survive a repeat of last summer’s nearly total … Continue reading
Posted in Spring-Fed Streams
Tagged Andrew Nichols, Ann Willis, Big Springs Creek, Klamath River, Shasta River, spring-fed streams
7 Comments
A salmon success story during the California drought
Looking back on 2014, it’s hard not to feel despair for California salmon. With drought-stricken rivers running dangerously warm and slow for spring migration, the government was giving millions of young hatchery salmon a lift to the Pacific by truck … Continue reading
Sex, lies and videotape: Premature maturation of Chinook salmon on Shasta River
Carson Jeffres, Senior Research Associate, Center for Watershed Sciences, University of California – Davis Migration to and from the sea (anadromy) is the iconic pattern we associate with Pacific salmon. They spend most of their life in the ocean, taking … Continue reading
Posted in Biology, Conservation, Fish
Tagged adaptation, Big Springs Creek, California, Chinook salmon, fish biology, fish life history, fish migration, Klamath River, salmon, Shasta River
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