Double Feature March Meeting
Michael Mamola of the California Fish and Wildlife Wild Trout group will speak at our March chapter meeting. He will provide a double feature talk about Caples Creek and Belize.
He will start with the snorkel survey conducted on Caples Creek in 2017. The survey was successful in finding fish at all locations examined. He will describe the process and plans for future monitoring.
He has just returned from a week in Belize where he fished for bonefish, permit and tarpon. He will provide a guide of where to go and how to get there as well as many fishing stories.
The meeting will be held at the Veterans Memorial Building, 130 Placerville Drive, Placerville on March 21. Bruce Butler will lead a fly tying group at 6:00PM. He will begin with beginning/intermediate difficulty patterns and all are encouraged to attend. A business meeting will start at 7:00 PM. We will introduce the Eldorado High Natural Resources Program and planned April volunteer event. We will continue our plea for people to join our board so that we may continue business. Michael Mamola will them make his presentation.
Coffee and cookies will be offered to fuel early discussion with your new friends. Of course we will also have our traditional raffle of fishing items.
Caples Survey Data at March Meeting
Hatchery-Selection-and-the-Effects-of-Egg-Size-on-Steelhead-Growth-and-Development
The use of hatcheries to supplement struggling wild populations and augment harvest opportunities remains one of the most controversial subjects in the salmon and steelhead world. While production hatcheries often provide harvest opportunities where they wouldn’t otherwise exist, they also present significant risks to wild populations.
A recent review by a team of researchers led by John McMillan, the former Wild Steelheaders Science Director, of over fifty years of peer-reviewed global hatchery research found that 83% of scientific studies indicated that hatcheries had adverse impacts on wild salmonid populations.
Hatchery Fish Negatively Affect Wild Populations
A LITERATURE REVIEW LED BY TROUT UNLIMITED SHOWS OVER 80 PERCENT OF GLOBAL, PEER-REVIEWED RESEARCH ON THE TOPIC HAS FOUND AN ADVERSE EFFECT ON WILD SALMONID POPULATIONS IN FRESHWATER AND MARINE ENVIRONMENTS
Best Places to Fish
Kirk Deeter's thoughts on the "Best Places to Fish"
1-Wherever I’m fishing at the time.
2-The place where I learned to fish.
3-The trout river closest to my home now.
4-The place where my family likes to fish with me.
5-The river where I meet my friends.
6-The lake where I can fish and throw a stick for my dog.
7-The stretch of river so familiar, I could almost row it blindfolded.
8-The place where I see moose, deer, bears, eagles and others that share their water with me.
9-The place where the drakes hatch, and every fish on the river feeds off the surface.
10-The place where I teach others to fish.
Caples Creek Reported Healthy
Our El Dorado chapter of Trout Unlimited held its November 16 meeting to report on the Survey of Caples Creek conducted by the TU Inland Trout Project personnel located in Truckee, CA. The survey was completed at the end of July and comprised six people over three days. Lauren Herbine, Restoration Scientist, and Dan Johnson presented and discussed the material. Documentation had been provided previously via a Google Earth project which provided location, pictures and text of observations. Fifty log jams were noted, ten pools were fished, seven passage barriers were found and twenty-seven potential sediment sources were described.
Lauren and Dan stated that the terrain proved tough, but the landscape was beautiful!
Their broad impressions were that Caples presents as a healthy, dynamic river responding well to recent wildfires. There were very few places that any sediment input looked dramatic, and for the most part were very happy with the amount of sediment and structure found in the creek. Log jams provided fantastic fish habitat and in some cases were even pushing water out into older oxbows. Sediment deposition took place in pocket floodplains where a healthy riparian buffer is forming. They saw or caught many trout around log jams. The lower part of the reach was exclusively Rainbow trout and the upper 1/3 contained Brook trout. No Brown trout were caught or observed. Fish were found in all sections although numbers and sizes were small.
The team has no recommendations for further study or restoration action. They believe that nature will continue to improve the biological conditions and hence the fish populations. The biologists present concurred in this belief. Some type of monitoring should be established to periodically review the conditions and fish population. Our chapter can develop a monitoring plan in the coming year. The El Dorado Irrigation District performs an electro shock survey for rainbow trout every fifth and sixth year at the Kirkwood meadow. this is useful data but limited in the broad scope of the creek.
DFW Has Grant Funding for Beaver Damage Mitigation
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) has announced the availability of up to $2 million in grant funding for non-lethal beaver damage management, in support of ecosystem restoration and protection under the Nature-Based Solutions Initiative and CDFW’s beaver restoration and human-wildlife conflict program objectives.
The North American beaver’s critically important role as an ecosystem engineer and keystone species, particularly as climate change, drought and wildfires increase in severity, has gained rapidly growing recognition in recent years. Because they are crucial to restoring and maintaining healthy ecosystems and their functions, CDFW has implemented new measures to maintain healthy beaver populations in suitable habitat throughout California.
Read more: DFW Has Grant Funding for Beaver Damage Mitigation
Sites Reservoir Not a Silver Bullet
Sites Reservoir is not a 21st century water solution. It will add little water to California’s supply. And as proposed, it will not provide net environmental benefits. Our coalition elaborated on these claims, in depth, in our protest.
The real and potential harms that will be caused by Sites Reservoir include (non-exhaustive):
Impacts to water quality, such as increased levels of metals and heavy metals, increased levels of aqueous mercury (which climbs the food chain), formation of harmful algal blooms both in the reservoir area and the Bay-Delta due to flow reduction.
Extensive greenhouse gas emissions.
Fragmented and destroyed wildlife habitat in the project area, with impacts to the Bald Eagle, Golden Eagle, Burrowing Owl, Giant Gartner Snake, Foothill Yellow-legged Frog, Mountain Lions, American Badgers, Monarch Butterflies, native bees, native bats, and many other species.
Story from Friends of the River
TU Staff Surveys Caples Creek
The TU staff from Truckee performed an initial survey of Caples Creek on July 22,23 and 24. A group of 6 persons traveled from the trailhead on Silver Fork Road to the dam at Caples Lake. This is a 7.5 mile journey on a straight line but is obviously much longer along the creek Their objective was to identify features which may impact the habitat and trout. They documented 6 pools, 118 log jams, 30 potential sediment sites and 7 barriers to fish passage. They took extensive photographs documenting the location and features of each item. I am confident they also made numerous other observations and notes which would define the habitat. Each of these noted items are recorded on Google Earth including images of each. We are looking forward to a presentatiion of results at our November meeting. The image of one of the meadow areas belies the rugged nature of the full length, elevation changes and deadfalls
Caples Creek Signage Updated
Anthony Cortez and William completed the Caples Creek Wild Trout signage update on August 25. They are pictured on the left. The sign update placed the new catch and release regulations for the creek. The central photo shows the newly identified "Girl scout access" trail at kirkwood Lake. The right hand image is the new sign at the northe end of the Caples dam replacing ones lost over the winter.
First of the Klamath Dams Comes Down
The Klamath River Renewal Corporation reported in July that Copco II, the first of four dams to be removed on the Klamath River, is nearly gone. Crews have been working hard this summer to remove the concrete structure and restore the river channel.
The other three dams will be removed next summer, allowing steelhead, salmon, and lamprey access to over 400 miles of spawning and rearing habitat in the upper basin for the first time in over a century.
Hemphill Dam Removed in Auburn Ravine
Salmon can now access 4 times more spawning area than they have for decades.
Since the 1930’s, a water-diversion dam about two miles east of downtown Lincoln has been a major problem for the salmon that swim up Auburn Ravine to spawn every fall and winter. In wet years, on average, 7 to 10 percent were able to get over that dam to reach good spawning areas upstream. In dryer years, none made it.
It was called the Hemphill Dam – probably named after a prominent Lincoln resident, Wallace Hemphill, who led various irrigation projects in the area around Lincoln in the 1920’s and 30’s.
The good news is that this dam has been removed. The site is now called the Hemphill Fish Passage Project. The salmon now have access to about eight miles of streambed. And they are using it!
Read More with HemphillDam.pdf
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