"Year after year, volunteers return to tributaries of the Klamath River, just like the fish they’re trying to help do the same thing.
Jimmy Peterson, a fisheries project coordinator for the Mid-Klamath Watershed Council, places rocks and stones to make fish passages in Fort Goff Creek, 60 miles up from the river’s mouth on California’s North Coast.
“This creek has extremely awesome habitat up top here,” Peterson says. “Extremely awesome.”
Then he translates: “The water stays really cold and there’s plenty of nice spawning gravel that go up fairly far into the watershed. There’s not a lot of human activity up there either, so it’s fairly untouched.”
Scientists estimate that a century ago, hundreds of thousands of coho may have run up the Klamath’s streams and tributaries. Now it’s a few thousand. Federal and private grants fund the council’s work, helping coho access “extremely awesome” habitat because coho are threatened with extinction."
Molly Peterson reports for KQED November 22, 2016.
"Will Klamath River Salmon Thrive Again After Dams Are Gone?"
Source: KQED, 11/23/2016