Klamath Plan Calls for Wild Anadromous Fish Populations in Newly Undammed River
The first step to better anadromous fisheries in northern California was getting rid of the Klamath River dams – an effort that took decades to come to fruition.
But what next? The dams are gone, fish need to be reintroduced to the hundreds of miles of fresh habitat.
California has a plan for that.
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife recently released the “Klamath River Anadromous Fishery Reintroduction and Restoration Monitoring Plan,” a 60-page blueprint to guide the...
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