Iron Gate, the lowest of the Klamath dams, was breached first on Jan. 9, followed by J.C. Boyle in Oregon, and finally, Copco 1. Draining the three reservoirs marks another milestone toward the removal of dams in the Lower Klamath Project.
鈥淎 lot of sediment mobilized and moved through the system, exactly according to our plans and our projections,鈥 said Mark Bransom, CEO of Klamath River Renewal Corporation, during a press conference on Thursday morning. 鈥淲e鈥檙e very pleased with the progress that has been made on the drawdown.鈥
In total, KRRC expects 5 to 7 million cubic yards of sediment鈥攖he same amount that the Klamath River would normally drain in a single year鈥攖o wash downstream over a short period of time. The material, composed mostly of very fine silt and dead algae, has imbued the river with a dark coffee color.
For several days last week, dissolved oxygen levels in the first 20 miles below Iron Gate dam hovered close to zero. Decomposing algae rob water of oxygen, as do oxidizing minerals. As the last of the reservoirs drained, they released oxygen-poor water, as well.
鈥淭he bottom of reservoirs have this anoxic layer鈥攖his layer of water that basically doesn鈥檛 have any oxygen in it,鈥 explained Desiree Tullos, professor of Water Resources Engineering at OSU.
The river becomes re-aerated as it tumbles over rocks; major tributaries like the Shasta River also bring in oxygenated water to the mainstem of the Klamath River. 鈥淭he farther away you get away from the reservoirs, the less and less impact you鈥檒l have,鈥 said Tullos.
Experts expected oxygen levels to dip, which is why drawdown was initiated in the winter months.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 have adult salmon in the river system, and most of the juveniles are up in the tributaries and have not yet started their out-migration to the ocean,鈥 said Bransom.
The draining of the reservoirs has left behind large 鈥渕udscapes,鈥 especially in the broader Copco Lake footprint. In late January, nearly a dozen deer became entrapped in the mud and perished around the former reservoir. California Department of Fish and Wildlife has since installed fladry鈥攕trings of small flags that flap in the breeze to dissuade animals鈥攁t several locations.
Thousands of fish that inhabited the reservoirs have also died. These are mostly non-native species, including yellow perch, crappie, and bass that thrive in calmer, warmer water.
鈥淚t was always expected that these species would not persist,鈥 said Dave Coffman, geoscientist for Resource Environmental Solutions, or RES, during the press conference.
Concerns over water quality
During a tense and lengthy public meeting on Feb. 13, several area residents expressed concerns about the entrapped animals and scores of dead fish, wells that have gone dry in the Copco Lake community, and the possibility of contaminated sediment being exposed and making its way downstream.
William Simpson, founder and CEO of the nonprofit Wild Horse Fire Brigade who lives near Yreka, Calif., referenced test results of a sample collected by one of his neighbors in late January that revealed elevated levels of several metals, including chromium.
鈥淚t鈥檚 shocking that you even bring up the whole idea of water quality when the only testing really going on is turbidity, flow and oxygen, when you have all these other things that need to be considered, which we know are in the sediment,鈥 said Simpson, who has been publishing strongly worded op-eds in Siskiyou News criticizing KRRC and dam removal.
Coffman cautioned against jumping to conclusions about Simpson鈥檚 water test results without knowing more about how it was collected, how it was taken care of, and whether or not it was filtered.
鈥淭here鈥檚 not enough information associated with it for it to be useful,鈥 said Coffman, adding that more than a decade of work went into evaluating the effects of dam removal on state waters. 鈥淭hat [work] included a lot of sediment and water quality testing on the stuff that鈥檚 impounded within the reservoirs.鈥
As part of the permitting process for removing the dams, KRRC developed a water quality monitoring plan. It includes continuous monitoring using permanently installed USGS gages from above J.C. Boyle to the river mouth; regular 鈥済rab samples鈥 of river water that are analyzed for cyanotoxins and nutrients like phosphorus; and sediment sampling.
Sediment samples collected from around the former reservoirs and from deposits downstream later this year will be tested for particulate metals, but none of the water samples are being tested for dissolved metals, said Coffman. 鈥淭ypically, we don鈥檛 see dissolved metal issues in surface runoff dominated systems like the Klamath River,鈥 he explained, adding that previous studies, most recently contracted by the U.S. EPA in 2020, did not raise concerns that any metals or contaminants would harm aquatic life or people鈥檚 use of the river.
鈥淭hat monitoring will continue for years beyond now to evaluate the temporary detrimental or negative impacts, but also the long-term recovery of the river,鈥 said Coffman.
Meanwhile, the Siskiyou County Board of Supervisors and Chief Administrative Officer asked Siskiyou County Environmental Health to 鈥渇ill some gaps鈥 in water quality testing. The department has begun sampling water at six sites along the river from just below Iron Gate dam to the town of Happy Camp. The first round of samples, taken Jan. 31, were tested for heavy metals. At the sites closest to the dams, concentrations of iron, aluminum, lead, and arsenic were above U.S. EPA drinking water standards.
At the public meeting, Rick Dean, community development director for Siskiyou County, cautioned that the drinking water standard is typically used to evaluate water from private wells and other potable water sources and is not the ideal metric for evaluating the quality of 鈥渟urface waters鈥 like rivers and lakes.
Farther from the dams, in the Mid-Klamath section of the river, concentrations of all metals except aluminum and iron fell below the drinking water standard, said Dean, attributing the lower concentrations further away from the dams 鈥減rimarily due to dilution.鈥
Additional samples collected on Feb. 6 are being tested for 49 constituents, including known carcinogens like dioxins and PCBs. The results will be posted on the county鈥檚 website, and they will continue testing on a quarterly basis.
In an email to JPR, Dean stressed that conditions on the river right now are dangerous. 鈥淭he river is extremely turbid with low to no visibility, [and] sediment discharge has created pockets of thick sediments that present entrapment danger to wildlife [and] livestock as well as humans,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淩iver water is not fit for consumption.鈥
Sprouts in the sediment
On Jan. 15, crews from the Yurok Tribe contracted by RES began planting native seeds in the reservoir footprints.
鈥淩ight now, crews are focused on Copco and Iron Gate,鈥 said Coffman. 鈥淎ccess is improving every day as these sediments continue to dry out, so we鈥檙e chipping away at the acreage.鈥
To date, they鈥檝e seeded about 400 acres, hand sowing with special seed mixes tailored for each site. Crews have planted over 27,000 acorns and 14,000 bare-root container plants.
Crews are not yet working at the former Topsy reservoir, behind J.C. Boyle dam in Southern Oregon. This reservoir footprint is higher and wetter than the other two, so RES will have a longer window for planting there.
In a few weeks, RES will begin seeding via helicopter to ensure all of the acreage is covered while the ground is still wet enough to induce germination. Already, tiny plants are beginning to emerge around the former reservoirs.
After final drawdown is complete later this spring, deconstruction of the three remaining dams will begin more or less simultaneously, starting in June. If all goes according to plan, the obstacles will be completely gone by September or October, giving salmon the chance to reach tributary creeks above the former dam sites this fall.