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The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) released 830,000 chinook salmon fry into the river, near the Iron Gate Dam, at the end of February — as part of an initiative by the ...
YREKA -- The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) said Saturday that 830,000 Chinook salmon fry, released from its Fall Creek Fish Hatchery in Siskiyou County, are presumed to have ...
The Chinook salmon fry died according to monitoring data downstream of the dam. Gas bubble disease occurs because of “environmental or physical trauma often associated with severe pressure ...
A large number of around 830,000 salmon fry released into Northern California’s Klamath River are believed to have died after they suffered gas bubble disease, state wildlife officials said Monday.
The additional Chinook salmon remaining in the hatchery exceeds the annual production goal and will help offset losses experienced with the initial release of fry.
The dam and tunnel are scheduled to be removed later this year. The fish were part of a Feb. 26 release of Chinook salmon fry into Fall Creek, which flows into the Klamath River, from a new $35 ...
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife announced Wednesday it has completed its release of approximately 23 million fall-run Chinook salmon ... over 1 million salmon fry released into ...
RED BLUFF — A record low number of endangered winter-run Chinook salmon fry migrated downriver from Redding to Red Bluff on the Sacramento River this year, according to preliminary data ...
The surviving fry will be clipped and released along with the young Chinook salmon held in other ponds at the Samish Hatchery that were not affected by Monday’s incident.
The tunnel and the dam of the same name will be removed later this year. The around 830,000 Chinook salmon fry were the first release from the Fall Creek Fish Hatchery, which was a $35 million ...