California conservationists and farmers unite to protect salmon
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[February 09, 2022]
By Daniel Trotta and Nathan Frandino
ROBBINS, Calif. (Reuters) - In an
experiment a decade in the making, biologists are releasing hatchery
salmon onto flooded Northern California rice fields, seeking to
replenish endangered fish species while simultaneously benefiting the
farmers' business model.
At a time when environmentalists are often pitted against agribusiness
in California's water wars, conservation scientists and rice farmers are
working together, trying to reclaim the great flood plains of the
Sacramento River for salmon habitat.
Their task is daunting. California's wetlands have all but disappeared,
converted into farms and cities in one of the great engineering feats,
or environmental crimes, of the 20th century.
Now, for the cost and inconvenience of flooding their fields, rice
farmers are earning goodwill and betting that a healthy salmon
population will avoid new regulations to protect wildlife and keep
adequate water flowing.
In recent years, biologists discovered that as rice straw decomposes in
flooded fields it creates a broth rich in fish food. They call it "zoop
soup."
"The zooplankton are so big and they're so juicy, it's like filet
mignon," said Andrew Rypel, a professor of fish ecology at the
University of California Davis and lead investigator on the project.
After fattening up on their zooplankton, the salmon return to the river,
swim downstream and beneath the Golden Gate Bridge on their way to sea,
returning years later to spawn the next generation.
The university's researchers have joined the California Rice Commission,
the conservation group California Trout and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture on the project, seeking to reverse the trend toward
dwindling fish populations as a result of human re-engineering of the
state's waterways and, in recent years, extreme drought exacerbated by
climate change .
"We don't want to just sit silently while extinctions happen," Rypel
said.
Before industrialization, the northern end of California's Central
Valley was a miles-wide flood plain straddling the Sacramento River - a
natural feeding ground for fish.
After one too many floods in the city of Sacramento, and realizing that
Mississippi River-style levees were insufficient to contain the diluvial
bounty, California built two bypasses in the Sacramento River for flood
control and irrigation.
That land is ideal for farming rice, and about 500,000 acres (200,000
hectares) are under cultivation today.
Though the natural state will never be restored, the flood plain can
reconnect to the river. Enhancing salmon habitat in the flood plains
helps the fish grow big early in life, improving their chances of
survival.
So far the results show juveniles feeding in the rice fields grow two to
five times faster than those in the river channel, said Carson Jeffres,
another researcher with the UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences.
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A researcher from University of California, Davis inspects a water
gate at a flooded rice field, as part of a joint project between
ecologists and rice farmers trying to reclaim the great flood plains
of the Sacramento River for salmon habitat, in Robbins, California,
U.S., February 4, 2022. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Though the experiment has placed
salmon on small parcels before, this winter marks the first time it
has been tried on a large scale on a working rice farm. Conservation
scientists hope to replicate the model on more farms in years to
come.
The salmon project is using 389 acres (157 hectares) on a pair of
rice farms at the Sutter Bypass near Robbins, about 30 miles (50 km)
northwest of Sacramento. One farm is intentionally flooded with
water and planted with hatchery fish, enabling the biologists to
study their progress and tag some with microchips to track their
movements.
A second farm is being prepared just in case the Sacramento
overflows this year, delivering naturally spawned salmon.
Engineering of the 20th century rerouted the natural migration of
water in California, speeding it from north to south. That turned
the state into an economic powerhouse at the cost of decimating its
fish https://nrm.dfg.ca.gov/FileHandler.ashx?DocumentID=104268&inline.
Some 83% of California's freshwater fishes are in decline or
extinct, according to UC Davis researchers, including the endangered
winter-run and spring-run Chinook salmon.
Salmon that grow big early in life have the best chance to thrive,
but California's aquatic expressways lack the nutrients of the flood
plain.
"We're trying to ... reactivate this floodplain and give the salmon
a little bit of this floodplain back that they historically relied
on," said Paul Buttner of the California Rice Commission.
The project was inspired by changes that turned flooded rice farms
into habitat for migrating ducks, geese and other waterfowl within
the Pacific Flyway, a north-south corridor linking North and South
America.
California rice farmers traditionally burned leftover rice straw
after the autumn harvest until a 1991 state law banned the practice,
largely in response to human complaints about smoke. When farmers
started using water to break down rice straw, the smoke cleared and
the birds started coming back.
Though no longer pristine wetlands, 90% of which have been lost in
California, the rice fields enticed enough migratory birds to once
again darken the sky, their honks and quacks bombinating across the
valley.
Rypel, the UC Davis researcher, calls it "one of the great
conservation stories in U.S. history."
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta in Carlsbad, Calif., and Nathan Frandino
in Robbins, Calif.; Writing by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Donna
Bryson and Lisa Shumaker)
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