Salmon are once again making their way up the Klamath River following a massive dam removal project. But some are now worried ...
On Aug. 13, Outdoor Life reported on a suspected avian botulism outbreak at the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge Complex on the Oregon-California border. Biologists with the California Waterfowl ...
More than 75,000 birds have died after an outbreak of disease in a California wetlands refuge. The Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge in the Klamath Basin, near the California-Oregon border, is in the ...
Klamath Basin farmer Marc Staunton spoke against the proposal this week at a U.S. House Committee on Natural Resources hearing. Staunton runs a farm that uses land on the Lower Klamath National ...
The discovery of Chinook salmon swimming through irrigation canals in the Klamath Drainage District is prompting renewed concern about the lack of fish screens meant to protect both farmland and fish.
After the largest dam-removal effort in U.S. history, salmon appear to be thriving in the Klamath River, though some are ...
In 2020, 60,000 birds died of botulism caused by low water conditions in the Klamath National Wildlife Refuge. On Aug. 6, it was discovered that Tule Lake is again infected and, at a minimum, hundreds ...
Courtesy of Moss Driscoll via Klamath Water Users Association A combination of botulism and bird flu has led to estimates of thousands of birds dying in the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge ...
Avian botulism has broken out at the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge Complex following a stretch of hot weather and water stagnation in the refuge complex’s wetlands, according to the ...
A sign marks the entrance into the Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge in Northern California. The refuge relies on the Klamath Project to deliver water for 140 square miles of habitat for migratory ...
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. — The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation will not curtail water to the Klamath Project in Southern Oregon and Northern California, despite an earlier warning to irrigators that cutbacks ...
A pair of C’waam, or Lost River suckers, at the Klamath Tribes Research Station near Chiloquin, Ore. The U.S. Department of the Interior is investing nearly $46 million from the Bipartisan ...
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