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Topic: Klamath River

Overview April 24, 2014

Klamath River

The Klamath River flows 253 miles from Southern Oregon to the California coast, draining a basin of more than 15,000 square miles. The watershed and its fisheries have been the subject of negotiation since the 1860s negotiations that have intensified and continue to this day.

The river has provided irrigation to ag lands since the late 19th century. Agricultural development drained vast areas of wetlands on the periphery of Upper Klamath Lake and in upstream watersheds. Some of this drained acreage has been restored and is now managed primarily for wetland benefits.

The watershed is divided geographically into two basins, upper and lower, divided by Iron Gate Dam, the lower most dam on the river. The Upper Basin is dry, with annual precipitation of about 13 inches at the river’s origin near Klamath Falls, Ore. Downstream, the climate grows wetter.

Native Americans have a significant presence in the Klamath Basin. Four major tribes have been influential in water negotiations: the Klamath Tribes, the Karuk Tribe, the Hoopa Valley Tribe and the Yurok Tribe.

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Aquafornia news May 8, 2025 The Oregonian

Opinion: A surge of salmon – and hope – after Klamath dams’ removal

Last year, we watched as the last of four dams were removed from the Klamath River in a historic endeavor. Karuk and Yurok citizens sighed in relief, grateful that decades of tribal-led activism, scientific research and litigation had succeeded in reopening 400 stream miles of spawning habitat for salmon and other species. The tears of joy came just a few weeks later, when research cameras showed the first of more than 6,000 fish traveling past the first dam site. Spawning salmon were crossing into Oregon’s Spencer Creek, a tributary of the Klamath, for the first time in 112 years. The salmon had remembered the way, for it is embedded into their DNA just as it is in our ancestors’ – a testament of shared memory and spiritual connection between our people and the river.
–Written by Russell “Buster” Attebery, chairman of the Karuk Tribe, and Joseph L. James, chairman of the Yurok Tribe.

Other Klamath River news:

  • KOBI (Medford, Ore.): White-water rafting on the ‘New Klamath’ River
  • IFLScience: Largest dam removal project in the world triggers return of salmon after years of campaigning
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Aquafornia news May 7, 2025 Klamath River Fund

News release: Klamath River Fund awards $1.2 million to support climate resilience and restoration

The Klamath River Fund, a program of Humboldt Area Foundation and Wild Rivers Community Foundation (HAF+WRCF), today announced $1.2 million in grants awarded to 12 organizations working across the Klamath Basin. These grants mark a significant step in the Fund’s 10-year commitment to invest in and amplify community-led climate resilience and restorative justice efforts following the unprecedented removal of four dams on the Klamath River in 2023 and 2024. … The grants invest in a wide range of organizations and projects including sustainable agriculture along the Sprague River at the Klamath’s headwaters in Oregon to the first effort to boat the length of the un-dammed Klamath by local Tribal youth.

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Aquafornia news April 29, 2025 KRCR (Redding, Calif.)

Promising signs for 2026 after California closes commercial salmon season for the year

For the third consecutive year, commercial salmon fishing off the California coast will be prohibited, although there will be a limited opportunity for recreational anglers for the first time since 2022. However, officials say data indicates the industry could see a return in 2026. Angela Forristall, salmon staff officer with the Pacific Fishery Management Council, said the decision to recommend closing the state’s commercial salmon fisheries for the year followed a challenging debate among the council and stakeholders from both the recreational and commercial fishing industries. Forristall shared that there were several versions of the recommendation that did open commercial fishing briefly, but the data they’re seeing from populations in the Klamath and Sacramento rivers says it’s potentially too soon for major operations. 

Other salmon news:

  • CalMatters: Why this California town is pivoting from its iconic fishing industry
  • Daily Kos: Blog: Failed water policies spawn unprecedented third commercial salmon season closure
  • Read more
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Aquafornia news April 28, 2025 The Guardian (London, U.K.)

Essay: Is this river alive? Robert Macfarlane on the lives, deaths and rights of our rivers

… Rivers are easily wounded. But given a chance, they heal themselves with remarkable speed. Their life pours back. On 2 October 2024, the century-old Iron Gate dam was removed from the upper Klamath River, who flows out of Oregon and into California. Its demolition concluded the largest de-damming project in US history, and was the outcome of two decades of campaigning and watershed activism, led by members of the Klamath Tribe. Only a few days later, something extraordinary happened. A sonar camera set up by scientists detected a single chinook salmon migrating upstream to spawn, past the pinch-point where the Iron Gate Dam had stood. It was the first fish to make that journey in more than 100 years, guided by an ancient navigation system and driven by an undeniable urge.

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Aquafornia news April 25, 2025 Herald and News (Klamath Falls, Ore.)

Opinion: Understanding ‘full allocation’ for Klamath farmers

The term “full allocation” is central to discussions about water rights for farmers on and off the Klamath Reclamation Project, but its meaning is often misunderstood. For the more than 220,000 acres of farmland in the Klamath Reclamation Project, a “full allocation” of water is not a single number but a range of measurements tied to contracts, legal adjudications, and the practical needs of crops. As poor federal policy continues to strain the region’s water resources, clarity on this term is essential for informed, on-farm decision-making. According to some contracts, such as the 1905 contract entered into by the Klamath Irrigation District, and for Tule Lake Irrigation District, which cover more than 100,000 acres within their borders, a “full allocation” is defined as water sufficient for beneficial use without waste. That number is unknowable …but able to be roughly estimated as exceeding 300,000 acre-feet for these two districts in an average year.
–Written by Gene Souza, the executive director of the Klamath Irrigation District.

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Aquafornia news April 24, 2025 KRCR (Redding, Calif.)

Assembly member Chris Rogers introduces a bill to extend emergency water regulations

Assemblymember Chris Rogers has introduced his bill, Assembly Bill 263, which aims to protect salmon populations in the Klamath River watershed while also providing local agricultural operations with certainty regarding river flows. This was introduced in partnership with the Karuk and Yurok Tribes, as well as the California Coastkeeper Alliance. … Bill 263 would allow specified emergency regulations adopted by the board for the Scott River and Shasta River watersheds to remain in effect until permanent rules establishing and implementing long-term instream flow requirements for these watersheds are enacted. According to Assemblyman Rogers, this measure is crucial for protecting salmon populations in the Klamath River watershed while providing certainty regarding river flows. … President Ryan Walker of the Siskiyou County Farm Bureau says farmers have concerns about the regulations and how it could affect their profits.

Other Klamath River news:

  • KOBI (Klamath Falls, Ore.): Klamath Basin rising out of drought after 8 years​
  • KLCC (Eugene, Ore.): After years of drought, Klamath Basin farmers get long-awaited water relief
  • Read more
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Aquafornia news April 23, 2025 Oregon Public Broadcasting

After years of drought, Klamath Basin farmers get long-awaited water relief

Water managers in the Klamath Basin say, for the first time since 2019, there will be enough water to meet everyone’s demands this year. An unusually wet winter has been a relief after a tough drought period. The Bureau of Reclamation released its annual operations plan on Monday, allocating 330,000 acre-feet of water to farmers from Upper Klamath Lake. Water is prioritized first to protect endangered species in the lake and river. Next, water is allocated to farmers, and finally, it can go to wildlife refuges. … The agency released a new plan last year that outlines water management for the Klamath Basin over the next five years. The removal of the dams on the Klamath River, along with new data, has prompted the need for the plan, according to the Bureau.

Related article:

  • Herald and News (Klamath Falls, Ore.): Reclamation announces official full water allocation, water users express mixed responses
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Aquafornia news April 22, 2025 Bureau of Reclamation

News release: Reclamation releases 2025 Klamath Project Annual Operations Plan

(From news release:) Anticipated water demands for Klamath Project water contractors are likely to be met as the Klamath Basin hydrology pivots from consecutive years of drought.  Described in the 2025 Klamath Project Annual Operations Plan, today’s initial water supply allocations from the Bureau of Reclamation are based on modeled estimates of water available for irrigation delivery and incorporate current reservoir storage, precipitation, and snowpack, as well as projected inflow forecasts. … The 2025 Plan is used as a planning and information tool by water users and details the volume of water available for Project irrigated agriculture as well as water reserved to meet Endangered Species Act requirements in the Klamath River and Upper Klamath Basin.

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Aquafornia news April 16, 2025 CalMatters

Wednesday Top of the Scroll: Commercial salmon season is shut down — again. Will California’s iconic fish ever recover?

Facing the continued collapse of Chinook salmon, officials today shut down California’s commercial salmon fishing season for an unprecedented third year in a row. Under the decision by an interstate fisheries agency, recreational salmon fishing will be allowed in California for only brief windows of time this spring. This will be the first year that any sportfishing of Chinook has been allowed since 2022. … The decline of California’s salmon follows decades of deteriorating conditions in the waterways where the fish spawn each year, including the Sacramento and Klamath rivers.

Other salmon news:

  • San Francisco Chronicle: California salmon fishing will be closed for the third year in a row
  • Los Angeles Times: U.S. panel calls for suspending commercial salmon fishing in California for third year
  • The Independent (London, U.K.): Californian salmon industry suffers despite Trump promise to put ‘people over fish’
  • California Department of Fish and Wildlife: News release: Pacific Fishery Management Council recommends limited recreational ocean salmon season, continued closure for commercial salmon fishing off California
  • Read more
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Aquafornia news April 15, 2025 Oregon Capital Chronicle

Oregon governor, congressional delegation urge feds to declare disaster for coast salmon fisheries

For the seventh time in less than a decade, Oregon’s commercial fishermen, governor and congressional delegation are asking for federal aid to soften the blow of climate change on the state’s ocean salmon fisheries. … Oregon’s commercial ocean salmon fishermen caught about 18,000 Chinook between March and October of 2024 — about 40% of the 10-year average. From 2011 to 2015, the average catch was closer to 75,000 per year, according to John North, an assistant fish division administrator with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. More than 50% of Chinook were caught in Newport in 2024, while southern Oregon fisheries struggled with low returns due to drought and warming waters in the Sacramento and Klamath rivers.

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Aquafornia news April 10, 2025 Los Angeles Times

Opinion: DOGE and Trump quash a Klamath River basin comeback

The Trump administration ruined what should have been a good spring in the Klamath River basin. By abruptly laying off federal personnel and freezing payments for already authorized programs and projects, the administration replaced a budding sense of hopefulness in the basin with fear and uncertainty, and tore at fragile bonds years in the making among upper basin ranchers and farmers, federal, state and local governments, nonprofits and Native tribes. In a region where conflict over water has simmered for the last quarter-century, trust was already fragile. Now it is smashed to smithereens. Through the 21st century the Klamath has lurched from crisis to crisis, usually related to the extended drought that has hovered over the basin most of that time. What distinguishes the current debacle is that it has no relation to natural phenomena. It’s entirely man-made — and entirely unnecessary.
–Written by Jacques Leslie, author of “Deep Water: The Epic Struggle Over Dams, Displaced People, and the Environment.”

Other dam removal news:

  • Lost Coast Outpost (Eureka, Calif.): Farm bureaus in Russian River counties issue plea to President Trump to keep the Potter Valley dams in place
  • The Daily Signal: Opinion: Farmers, not bureaucrats, deserve control of California’s water: a farmer’s call for stability​
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Aquafornia news April 9, 2025 Oregon Live

‘Oregon Field Guide’ special explores aftermath of Klamath River dam removal project

After decades of efforts to remove dams on the Klamath River near the California-Oregon border, the project was completed last year. It was the largest dam removal project in U.S. history and, as the Associated Press reported, the removal was a victory for tribes in the region who had fought to free the river from four hydroelectric dams which, advocates said, had contributed to environmental damage, including disrupting the life cycle of salmon in the region. … A special episode of OPB’s “Oregon Field Guide” series, titled “Klamath: After the Dams,” will explore issues that exist in the wake of the dam removal, including challenges to repair salmon habitat, dealing with water shortages, and other conflicts.

Related video:

  • Oregon Public Broadcasting: Oregon Field Guide: After the dams: What’s next for the Klamath River?
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Aquafornia news April 8, 2025 Oregon Public Broadcasting

Podcast: ‘The Evergreen’: A year after undamming the Klamath, two dams still remain

On “The Evergreen,” we’ve talked about the history behind the largest dam removal project in the United States: the long fight over water in the Klamath basin between Tribes and farmers, the process of getting the dams out, and what dam removal means to the Tribes along the river. Today, we’re bringing you up to date. What’s on folks’ minds now that all the dams are out a year later — and what still needs to be done to piece this basin together again? Cassandra Profita is an editor and reporter at OPB. She’s been covering the Klamath Dam removal for years and joins us to talk about the challenges that remain to repair salmon habitat.

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Aquafornia news April 4, 2025 Oregon Public Broadcasting

Salmon return to the Klamath’s Oregon waters, but the river’s headwaters are still blocked

… A lot of hope was pouring into the river along with those fish as the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and the Klamath Tribes entered the beginning stages of starting a new run of spring chinook salmon. … The country’s largest dam removal project took four dams off the Klamath River in Southern Oregon and Northern California over the past two years. A free-flowing river has reemerged where Copco 1 and 2, Iron Gate and J.C. Boyle dams used to be. For Indigenous tribes, including the Klamath, Shasta, Karuk, Hoopa Valley and Yurok, the project was a huge victory. Painful water conflicts have dragged on for decades in the Klamath Basin, with farmers, fish and tribes all suffering. Now four dams are out, bringing renewed hope for salmon restoration. But on the Klamath, it’s going to take a lot more to piece the basin together again.

Other Klamath River news:

  • Oregon Public Broadcasting: Podcast: ‘OPB Politics Now’: Is the Pacific Northwest entering an era of dam removal?
  • Legal Planet: Blog: Success! Removing the Klamath Dams
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Aquafornia news February 5, 2024 Daily Tidings

Klamath dam removals: Loss of Copco Lake leaves some residents reeling

The dam removal projects- aimed at sustaining the salmon population, are underway, with the latest drawdown being three reservoirs on the Klamath River. The removal process has already dramatically changed the landscape in Southern Oregon and far Northern California, along the course of the river. The lowest of the three remaining dams- Iron Gate, was initially breached on January 9, followed by the J.C. Boyle reservoir on January 16. A concrete plug in the tunnel at the base of Copco 1 was blasted away on January 23, with the reservoirs draining quickly, leaving vast expanses of fissured mud that was the consistency and color of chocolate cake batter. Shaping its new course, the Klamath River is winding through the bare landscape, but the transformation has had some unintended consequences and saddened some residents.

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Aquafornia news December 20, 2023 CalMatters

State limits water for Klamath farmers to protect salmon

…Tuesday, the State Water Resources Control Board took action to protect the salmon, unanimously extending the region’s expired emergency drought measures. Ground and surface water for farms will be restricted for another year if flows in the Shasta and Scott rivers dip below minimum thresholds. State officials say these measures are likely to kick in next year. Water board chair Joaquin Esquivel said action is needed because “a fish emergency” remains on the rivers. “Time isn’t our friend,” he said at a previous meeting in August. “There is an urgency.” The water board also is investigating the possibility of permanent requirements to keep more water in the rivers, after the Karuk Tribe and the fishing industry petitioned the state for stronger protections. That decision, however, could take years.

Related articles: 

  • Marin Independent Journal: Marin rain could spur salmon activity
  • Sonoma County Gazette: $2 million grant awarded to Sonoma Water to help salmon, steelhead in Russian River
  • CA Department of Fish and Wildlife: News release - Proposition 1 restoration grant programs
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Western Water August 3, 2023 Layperson's Guide to the Klamath River Basin Klamath River Watershed Map WESTERN WATER: Solar-Paneled Canopies over Canals Catching on in Southwest By Nick Cahill

‘If You Unbuild It, They Will Come’
WESTERN WATER IN-DEPTH: Scientists Chart Transformation of Klamath River and Its Salmon Amid Nation’s Largest Dam Removal Project

The Copco No. 1 dam on the Klamath RiverThe Klamath River Basin was once one of the world’s most ecologically magnificent regions, a watershed teeming with salmon, migratory birds and wildlife that thrived alongside Native American communities. The river flowed rapidly from its headwaters in southern Oregon’s high deserts into Upper Klamath Lake, collected snowmelt along a narrow gorge through the Cascades, then raced downhill to the California coast in a misty, redwood-lined finish.

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Western Water October 24, 2019 California Water Map Gary Pitzer

Understanding Streamflow Is Vital to Water Management in California, But Gaps In Data Exist
WESTERN WATER NOTEBOOK: A new law aims to reactivate dormant stream gauges to aid in flood protection, water forecasting

Stream gauges gather important metrics such as  depth, flow (described as cubic feet per second) and temperature.  This gauge near downtown Sacramento measures water depth.California is chock full of rivers and creeks, yet the state’s network of stream gauges has significant gaps that limit real-time tracking of how much water is flowing downstream, information that is vital for flood protection, forecasting water supplies and knowing what the future might bring.

That network of stream gauges got a big boost Sept. 30 with the signing of SB 19. Authored by Sen. Bill Dodd (D-Napa), the law requires the state to develop a stream gauge deployment plan, focusing on reactivating existing gauges that have been offline for lack of funding and other reasons. Nearly half of California’s stream gauges are dormant.

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Western Water October 19, 2018 Klamath River Watershed Map Layperson's Guide to Groundwater Gary Pitzer

California Leans Heavily on its Groundwater, But Will a Court Decision Tip the Scales Against More Pumping?
WESTERN WATER NOTEBOOK: Pumping near the Scott River in Siskiyou County sparks appellate court ruling extending public trust doctrine to groundwater connected to rivers

Scott River, in Siskiyou County. In 1983, a landmark California Supreme Court ruling extended the public trust doctrine to tributary creeks that feed Mono Lake, which is a navigable water body even though the creeks themselves were not. The ruling marked a dramatic shift in water law and forced Los Angeles to cut back its take of water from those creeks in the Eastern Sierra to preserve the lake.

Now, a state appellate court has for the first time extended that same public trust doctrine to groundwater that feeds a navigable river, in this case the Scott River flowing through a picturesque valley of farms and alfalfa in Siskiyou County in the northern reaches of California.

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Aquapedia background August 25, 2016 Layperson's Guide to California Water California Water Map

Headwaters

The Eastern Sierra's Thousand Island Lake

Headwaters are the source of a stream or river. They are located at the furthest point from where the water body empties or merges with another. Two-thirds of California’s surface water supply originates in these mountainous and typically forested regions.

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Western Water Excerpt August 16, 2016 Jenn Bowles

Outdated Dams: When Removal Becomes an Option
Summer 2016

Mired in drought, expectations are high that new storage funded by Prop. 1 will be constructed to help California weather the adverse conditions and keep water flowing to homes and farms.

At the same time, there are some dams in the state eyed for removal because they are obsolete – choked by accumulated sediment, seismically vulnerable and out of compliance with federal regulations that require environmental balance.

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Video May 27, 2014

The Klamath Basin: A Restoration for the Ages (20 min. DVD)

20-minute version of the 2012 documentary The Klamath Basin: A Restoration for the Ages. This DVD is ideal for showing at community forums and speaking engagements to help the public understand the complex issues related to complex water management disputes in the Klamath River Basin. Narrated by actress Frances Fisher.

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Video May 27, 2014

The Klamath Basin: A Restoration for the Ages (60 min. DVD)

For over a century, the Klamath River Basin along the Oregon and California border has faced complex water management disputes. As relayed in this 2012, 60-minute public television documentary narrated by actress Frances Fisher, the water interests range from the Tribes near the river, to energy producer PacifiCorp, farmers, municipalities, commercial fishermen, environmentalists – all bearing legitimate arguments for how to manage the water. After years of fighting, a groundbreaking compromise may soon settle the battles with two epic agreements that hold the promise of peace and fish for the watershed. View an excerpt from the documentary here.

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Video May 27, 2014

A Climate of Change: Water Adaptation Strategies

This 25-minute documentary-style DVD, developed in partnership with the California Department of Water Resources, provides an excellent overview of climate change and how it is already affecting California. The DVD also explains what scientists anticipate in the future related to sea level rise and precipitation/runoff changes and explores the efforts that are underway to plan and adapt to climate.

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Maps & Posters May 20, 2014

Klamath River Watershed Map
Published 2011

This beautiful 24×36-inch poster, suitable for framing, displays the rivers, lakes and reservoirs, irrigated farmland, urban areas and Indian reservations within the Klamath River Watershed. The map text explains the many issues facing this vast, 15,000-square-mile watershed, including fish restoration; agricultural water use; and wetlands. Also included are descriptions of the separate, but linked, Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement and the Klamath Hydroelectric Agreement, and the next steps associated with those agreements. Development of the map was funded by a grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

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Maps & Posters May 20, 2014

California Water Map, Spanish

Spanish language version of our California Water Map

Versión en español de nuestro mapa de agua de California

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Publication May 20, 2014

Layperson’s Guide to the Klamath River Basin
Published 2023

The Water Education Foundation’s second edition of the Layperson’s Guide to The Klamath River Basin is hot off the press and available for purchase.

Updated and redesigned, the easy-to-read overview covers the history of the region’s tribal, agricultural and environmental relationships with one of the West’s largest rivers — and a vast watershed that hosts one of the nation’s oldest and largest reclamation projects.

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Video April 17, 2014

The Klamath Basin: A Restoration for the Ages
Hosted by Frances Fisher

The Klamath Basin: A Restoration for the Ages
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Maps & Posters April 17, 2014 California Water Bundle

California Water Map
Updated December 2016

A new look for our most popular product! And it’s the perfect gift for the water wonk in your life.

Our 24×36-inch California Water Map is widely known for being the definitive poster that shows the integral role water plays in the state. On this updated version, it is easier to see California’s natural waterways and man-made reservoirs and aqueducts – including federally, state and locally funded projects – the wild and scenic rivers system, and natural lakes. The map features beautiful photos of California’s natural environment, rivers, water projects, wildlife, and urban and agricultural uses and the text focuses on key issues: water supply, water use, water projects, the Delta, wild and scenic rivers and the Colorado River.

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Aquapedia background February 11, 2014 California Water Map Layperson's Guide to California Water

Pacific Flyway

Sacramento National Wildlife RefugeThe Pacific Flyway is one of four major North American migration routes for birds, especially waterbirds, and stretches from Alaska in the north to Patagonia in South America.

Each year, birds follow ancestral patterns as they travel the flyway on their annual north-south migration. Along the way, they need stopover sites such as wetlands with suitable habitat and food supplies. In California, 95 percent of historic wetlands have been lost, yet the Central Valley hosts some of the world’s largest populations of wintering birds. 

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Aquapedia background February 10, 2014

Klamath River Basin Chronology

1849-1850 Gold discovered in the Lower Klamath Basin. Farms and ranches established in the Scott and Shasta valleys.

1855 Klamath River Reservation established on the Lower Klamath River.

1864 Hoopa Valley Tribe and Klamath Tribes cede most of their lands for settlement but retain large reservations.

1868 Two farmers dig first irrigation ditch in the Upper Klamath Basin.

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Aquapedia background February 10, 2014 Layperson's Guide to the Klamath River Basin Klamath River Watershed Map

Klamath River Basin

Cropland around Upper Klamath Lake in Oregon

The Klamath River Basin is one of the West’s most important and contentious watersheds.

The watershed is known for its peculiar geography straddling California and Oregon. Unlike many western rivers, the Klamath does not originate in snowcapped mountains but rather on a volcanic plateau. 

A broad patchwork of spring-fed streams and rivers in south-central Oregon drains into Upper Klamath Lake and down into Lake Ewauna in the city of Klamath Falls. The outflow from Ewauna marks the beginning of the 263-mile Klamath River.

The Klamath courses south through the steep Cascade Range and west along the rugged Siskiyou Mountains to a redwood-lined estuary on the Pacific Ocean just south of Crescent City, draining a watershed of 10 million acres. 

A bounty of resources – water, salmon, timber and minerals – and a wide range of users turned the remote region into a hotspot for economic development and multiparty water disputes (See Klamath River timeline).

Though the basin has only 115,000 residents, there is seldom enough water to go around. Droughts are common. The water scarcity inflames tensions between agricultural, environmental and tribal interests, namely the basin’s four major tribes: the Klamath Tribes, the Karuk, Hoopa Valley and Yurok. Klamath water-use conflicts routinely spill into courtrooms, state legislatures and Congress. 

In 2023, a historic removal of four powers dams on the river began, signaling hope for restoration of the river and its fish and easing tensions between competing water interests. In February 2024, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland announced a “historic” agreement between tribes and farmers in the basin over chronic water shortages. The deal called for a wide range of river and creek restoration work and modernization of agricultural water supply infrastructure. 

Water Development

Farmers and ranchers have drawn irrigation water from basin rivers and lakes since the late 1900s. Vast wetlands around Upper Klamath Lake and upstream were drained to grow crops. Some wetlands have been restored, primarily for migratory birds.

In 1905, the federal government authorized construction of the Klamath Project, a network of irrigation canals, storage reservoirs and hydroelectric dams to grow an agricultural economy in the mostly dry Upper Basin. The Project managed by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation irrigates about 240,000 acres and supplies the Lower Klamath Lake and Tule Lake national wildlife refuges managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Klamath River Basin

Water Management

Since 1992, federal mandates to restore populations of fish protected by the Endangered Species Act have led in some dry years to drastic cuts in water deliveries to Klamath Project irrigators.

Water in Upper Klamath Lake must be kept above certain levels for the endangered shortnose and Lost River suckers. Lake levels and Klamath River flows below Iron Gate Dam also must be regulated for the benefit of threatened coho salmon (See Klamath Basin Chinook and Coho Salmon).

Conflict

In 2001, Reclamation all but cut off irrigation water to hundreds of basin farmers and ranchers, citing a severe drought and legal obligations to protect imperiled fish. In response, thousands of farmers, ranchers and residents flocked to downtown Klamath Falls to form a “bucket brigade” protest, emptying buckets of water into the closed irrigation canal. The demonstrations stretched into the summer, with protestors forcing open the irrigation headgates on multiple occasions. Reclamation later released some water to help farmers.

Karuk fisheries workers netting salmon in Klamath River.In September 2002, a catastrophic disease outbreak in the lower Klamath River killed tens of thousands of ocean-going salmon. The Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations sued Reclamation, alleging the Klamath Project’s irrigation deliveries had violated the Endangered Species Act. The fishing industry eventually prevailed, and a federal court ordered an increase to minimum flows in the lower Klamath.

Compromise

The massive salmon kill and dramatic water shut-off set in motion a sweeping compromise between the basin’s many competing water interests: the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement and the Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement. The 2010 agreements included:

  • Removal of four hydroelectric dams
  • $92.5 million over 10 years to pay farmers to use less water, increase reservoir storage and help pay for water conservation and groundwater management projects.
  • $47 million over 10 years to buy or lease water rights to increase flows for salmon recovery.

Dam Removals

Congress never funded the two agreements, allowing the key provisions to expire. The restoration accord dissolved in 2016. The hydroelectric pact, however, was revived in an amended version that did not require federal legislation.

The new deal led to the nation’s largest dam removal project ever undertaken.

The Klamath's Copco No. 2 DamCalifornia and Oregon formed a nonprofit organization called the Klamath River Renewal Corporation to take control of the four essentially obsolete power dams – J.C. Boyle, Copco No. 1, Copco No. 2 and Iron Gate – and oversee a $450 million dam demolition and river restoration project.

Taking out the dams will open more than 420 miles of river and spawning streams that had been blocked for more than a century, including cold water pools salmon and trout need to survive the warming climate.  

Demolition crews took out the smallest dam in 2023 and the others were scheduled to come down by the end of 2024.

The images of yellow heavy machinery tearing into the dam’s spillway gates prompted a cathartic release for many who have been fighting for decades to open this stretch of the Klamath.

“I’m still in a little bit of shock,” said Toz Soto, the Karuk fisheries program manager. “This is actually happening…It’s kind of like the dog that finally caught the car, except we’re chasing dam removal.”

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Aquapedia background February 10, 2014

Klamath Basin Water Quality

 Klamath Basin Water Quality

On the Klamath River, the Upper Klamath Basin’s aquatic ecosystems are naturally very productive due to its phosphorus-rich geology.

However, this high productivity makes the Basin’s lakes vulnerable to water quality problems.

Nutrient loads in the Upper Klamath Basin are a primary driver of water quality problems along the length of the Klamath River, including algal blooms in the Klamath Hydroelectric Project reservoirs. Municipal and industrial discharges of wastewater in the Klamath Falls area add to the nutrient load.

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Aquapedia background February 10, 2014

Klamath Basin Chinook and Coho Salmon

The Klamath Basin’s Chinook salmon and coho salmon serve a vital role in the watershed.

Together, they are key to the region’s water management, habitat restoration and fishing.

However, years of declining population have led to federally mandated salmon restoration plans—plans that complicate the diversion of Klamath water for agriculture and other uses.

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Western Water Magazine January 1, 2004

Remnants of the Past: Management Challenges of Terminal Lakes
January/February 2005

This issue of Western Water examines the challenges facing state, federal and tribal officials and other stakeholders as they work to manage terminal lakes. It includes background information on the formation of these lakes, and overviews of the water quality, habitat and political issues surrounding these distinctive bodies of water. Much of the information in this article originated at the September 2004 StateManagement Issues at Terminal Water Bodies/Closed Basins conference.

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Western Water Excerpt May 1, 2000 Sue McClurgRita Schmidt Sudman

The Klamath River Basin: A Microcosm of Water in the West
May/Jun 2000

The story of the Klamath River is the story of two basins.

In the upper basin, farming has long been the way of life. Even before passage of the 1902 Reclamation Act, settlers had begun the arduous process of reclaiming vast tracts of wetlands and transforming them into rich farmland.

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