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Date
So as not to discriminate between the right coast and the left coast, I want to talk about a west coast project. “The Last Dam Summer” is the slogan adopted by Olympic National Park for the months preceding the removal of two dams on the Elwha River in Washington State. The Olympic Peninsula is a large arm in the western part of the state across Puget Sound from Seattle. The people aspect affected by the removal of the dams is very diverse. Affected are various sporting groups who advocate the creation of a barrier free environment for anadromous fish, like salmon that need to return to freshwater to spawn, state and federal agencies who will help fund and oversee the project, and the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe (LEKT), a group of native Americans who home was at the mouth of the river for thousands of years.
The planet aspect of the affected by the dam removal project is more straightforward, more or less anyway. The LEKT has been struggling for two decades to bring migratory fish back into the 70 miles of mainstream river and tributaries. The removal of the dam will open up some of the most pristine fish habitat in the Lower 48. Prior to the construction of the two hydroelectric dams, Glines Canyon and Elwha Dams, the Elwha River hosted large runs of North American Pacific salmon, summer and winter steelhead (a sea run rainbow trout), and Chinook salmon in excess of 100 pounds in weight. It also had a healthy population of native rainbow trout. The dams changed the ecosystem. Bug life, so important to the fish, was drastically altered by the change from free running water to still water behind the dam. As a result, fish population dwindled, coupled with the inability of the anadromous fish to breach the dam, the fishery went into a severe decline. Even after the dams are removed the recovery isn't a quick process. Optimistically, it could take as little as 5 years to see significant recover, but it may take as long as 30 years. At least there is a chance, now.
This is the largest dam removal project in history, estimated to cost $350 million. However, included in that cost is; a new water purification system for Port Angeles, a nursery for native plants to restore the shoreline of the reservoir behind the dams, a $16 million tribal fish hatchery and extensive scientific research and monitoring. While controversial (there are factions that are unhappy with having hatchery fish compete with wild populations), a large part of the LEKT tribal income if derived from fishing. The hatchery is intended to supplement or at least maintain a fishery until wild populations take over. There continues to be an ongoing battle between the advocates against the hatchery and the pro-hatchery advocates. That will probably be played out in court. So the profit aspect of the 3 Ps is less obvious, and it’s not always about money (although it helps).
For more information see the article in the Jan/Feb 2012 issue of American Angler magazine and visit the website of the National Park Service for their perspective and update.
Posted
by
Dave Shirley
on: June 23, 2012 02:00 PM |
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