Yurok Tribal Fisheries members in red pontoon boat float Klamath River
Leanne Knutson, Gilbert Myers and Jamie Holt of Yurok Tribal Fisheries. (Alysha Beck/ UC Davis)

The Salmon Diaries: Life Before and After Klamath Dam Removal

Salmon ‘Tell’ Scientists Their Life Story as Decades-Old Dams Come Down

"When salmon return from the ocean to the Klamath River after the world’s largest dam removal project ends this fall, they will regain access to 400 miles of historical spawning habitat their species has been cut off from for more than a century.

From the river to the lab, looking at the very ear bones of fish, scientists with the University of California, Davis, are playing a key role helping to answer a big dam question: Will it work? Will a diverse population of salmon thrive again once the dams are removed and the Klamath River restored? 

The answers are important not only for the Klamath but also for dams across the world that have outlived their usefulness. Less than 100 miles south of Klamath, for instance, is the Eel River, where a dam is slated to be removed in 2028. In 2023 alone, 80 dams were demolished across the U.S."

Read the full story at UC Davis News

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