Wildlife Officials Dedicate Fish Screens that Protect
Coho Salmon in Scott River
Wildlife Conservation Board-Funded Program
will be Operated by the Siskiyou Resource Conservation District
State and local wildlife officials will dedicate a series of 32 fish
screens along the Scott River on Wednesday, June 14. The Wildlife
Conservation Board (WCB), California Department of Fish and Game (DFG)
and Siskiyou Resource Conservation District (SQRCD) will hold a ceremony
at 10 a.m. at a diversion site along the river’s French Creek tributary
near Etna. The WCB funded the fish screen program, designed to protect
the threatened coho salmon with screens, head gates, diversion and
riparian improvements on the properties of 20 private landowners,
through a $565,741 grant.“This program will help solve the ongoing
conflicts between the needs of threatened and endangered species and the
agricultural needs of farmers and landowners,” said DFG Director Ryan
Broddrick. “The program’s objective to ensure protection of thousands of
juvenile anadromous fish each year succeeds through the efforts of
several agencies and the support of landowners who recognize the
importance of such an undertaking.”
The Scott River Fish Screening Program, which began in 2002,
supplements the ongoing fish screening efforts of DFG and the SQRCD to
protect salmon that travel through the Klamath River basin. The program
fulfills the mission of both the SQRCD and the Scott River Watershed
Council to improve anadromous fish populations and habitat while
maintaining existing resource economies. The federal Natural Resource
Conservation Service is also involved in the program.
The Scott River Watershed is an 812-square mile drainage in extreme
northern California. The headwaters reach more than 8,000 feet in
elevation and stretches 70 stream miles to the Klamath River at an
elevation of 1,600 feet. The main stem of the Scott River begins at the
southern end of Scott Valley.
Designers of the self-cleaning fish screens ensured that they met
specifications developed by DFG and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration. Contractors built screens along diversions on the Scott
River and tributaries to the Scott River that are accessible to chinook
and coho salmon, steelhead and native rainbow trout.
“Prior to the fish screen program, thousands of juvenile
anadromous fish were routinely lost to the unscreened diversions. These
screens prevent losses by keeping juvenile fish out of diversion ditches
and returning them safely to the stream,” said SQRCD district manager
Carolyn Pimentel. “With the tremendous help from the Wildlife
Conservation Board, the SQRCD was able to make a significant
contribution to the protection of anadromous fish in the Scott River
watershed.”
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