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- Q4600209 subject Q13241168.
- Q4600209 subject Q6432080.
- Q4600209 subject Q7154961.
- Q4600209 subject Q8460480.
- Q4600209 subject Q8517727.
- Q4600209 subject Q8546719.
- Q4600209 subject Q8574872.
- Q4600209 abstract "The 2002 Klamath River fish kill occurred on the Klamath River in California in September 2002. Over 70,000 adult chinook salmon were killed when returning to the river to spawn, making it the largest salmon kill in the history of the American west.A report by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that the kill resulted from water diversions to Klamath Basin by farmers and ranchers during a drought year. The report found that the atypical low flow in the river along with high fish return numbers and high water temperatures allowed for a gill rot disease to kill at least 33,000 salmon in September 2002, before they could reproduce. The die-off was downstream of the Trinity inflow, and the salmon of the Trinity were impacted to a greater degree than the Klamath as the Trinity run was at its peak. The report does mention that the official fish die-off estimate of 34,056 is probably quite low and could be only half of the actual loss. Klamath River flows as measured at the river gauge in Keno show a low flow of 800 cubic feet per second (22.7 m3/s) in September 1908 (before irrigation began). During the 2002 fish kill, flows of 475 cubic feet per second (13.5 m3/s) were recorded. During September of the 2001 irrigation shut-off, an average of 688 cubic feet per second (19.5 m3/s) was recorded.In response to a 2007 Washington Post story critical of United States Vice President Dick Cheney's role in diverting water to farmers and ranchers for political gain, the House Natural Resources Committee began an investigation into his role in instigating the fish kill.The fish kill played an important role in stirring an effort by local American Indian peoples, in concert with environmentalists and fishers, to remove dams on the Klamath River.".
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q11699.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q12612.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q13241168.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q1359718.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q1420425.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q1455628.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q166032.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q34344.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q48259.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q49297.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q5211855.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q624560.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q6419627.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q6432080.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q674113.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q7154961.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q766145.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q7889975.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q833503.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q8460480.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q8517727.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q8546719.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q8574872.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q968640.
- Q4600209 wikiPageWikiLink Q99.
- Q4600209 comment "The 2002 Klamath River fish kill occurred on the Klamath River in California in September 2002. Over 70,000 adult chinook salmon were killed when returning to the river to spawn, making it the largest salmon kill in the history of the American west.A report by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that the kill resulted from water diversions to Klamath Basin by farmers and ranchers during a drought year.".
- Q4600209 label "2002 Klamath River fish kill".