Listen to the audio file of this interview here .
Host Intro: In part four of Our Northwest Water, Sueann Ramella brings us a report on salmon and its vulnerability to water demands.
(Sockeye Salmon)
Scientists stepped in to help save sockeye from extinction by catching Larry and freezing his sperm for use in hatcheries. But why is the salmon issue so important? Dr. Michael Barber is the director of water research at Washington State University.
Barber: "Salmon is very important for a variety of reasons. We have commercial fisheries out in the ocean, local tribal fisheries and sport fisheries in the state that thrive on salmon fishermen. We have the cultural aspects of salmon for many Native Americans in the NW. They are certainly an indication of stream health as well."
Ramella: Streams that are also needed for irrigation. And there is also habitat competition from dams. Dams such as the Grand Coulee generate an enormous amount of electricity but also disrupt salmon migration. So why not find alternative energy sources and remove some dams?
Barber: "They've been talking about removing Ice Harbor up to the Lower Granite for a number of years, but realistically, from the power it generates, from the barge traffic that moves up and down for the wheat growers, those plans will be talked about, but that would be a very difficult thing to do politically."
Ramella: There are programs designed to take into account the needs of farmers, towns as well as salmon.
Barber: "Black Rock Reservoir is being proposed over in the Yakima basin where they are looking at taking water from the Columbia
Ramella: Some salmon even hitch a ride.
Ramella: Trucking salmon may help the fish pass the dams but a recent study by a University of Idaho
And another issue crops up once the juvenile salmon are ready to migrate back to the ocean: Water pressure.
Barber: "The bigger problem is the fish goes from a high pressure system where they are in 100 ft under water on one side of the dam and then come shooting out the other side to 10 ft of water. It's a shock. It’s much like a human diver coming up too fast.
Ramella: "Getting the bends."
Barber: "Getting the bends. You get the nitrogen problems in the fish. It can kill them but more likely then not it stuns them and they become easy prey, at least temporarily."
Ramella: Managing the water requirements for salmon is complex. Different species of fish migrate at different times so the timing of what is required is hard to manage. Then there's the issue of funding. We learned in Our Northwest Water that we can have enough water for agriculture, towns and fish, but what we really need is money.
For more information on water issues visit Our Northwest at nwpr.org. You can add your comments and find more reports on environmental issues facing the Northwest. I'm Sueann Ramella.
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