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  • Environment
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The Challenges of Salvaging Smelt and Other Delta Fish

  •  Amy Quinton 
Monday, July 15, 2013 | Sacramento, CA
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Fish -- including endangered species like the Delta smelt -- are put in holding tanks then trucked to other parts of the Delta and released. From there, little is known about their fate. But most scientists agree it's not good. Predator often wait for what amounts to a daily feeding.

Imagine you’re an endangered Delta smelt. You’re not quite three inches long; you can’t swim very well so you mainly ride on the current. That current could take you to the not-so quiet Skinner Fish Facilities in Tracy.

From there you flow through pipes and into an 1100 gallon holding tank.

 Fish holding tank

Holding Tanks at Skinner Fish Facilities. Amy Quinton / Capital Public Radio

"Our whole intent is to salvage all those small fish before they get into the system so they don't get lost and never return," says Jim Odom with the California Department of Water Resources. He runs the Skinner Fish Facilities.

The system is the state water project, where water from the Delta is pumped to Central and Southern California.

 fish tanker truck

 Mechanical bucket loads fish onto tanker truck. Amy Quinton / Capital Public Radio

 After being counted, a mechanical bucket loads you, the lowly smelt and all kinds of other fish, into a tanker truck. Some of those other fish may be hungry.

“The longer we keep them in captivity the more chance they have of perishing or being eaten up by some of the other predators that we’re salvaging," says Odom. "We salvage everything that comes through the system gets loaded up here and hauled back.”

Your tanker truck then travels to Sherman Island and backs up to one of two release sites.

 fish release site

Tanker truck at release site on Sherman Island. Amy Quinton / Capital Public Radio

A big pipe shoots you and all those other fish 50 feet out into the water.

And, if you survive that process, which isn’t likely, death may await you at the end of the pipe.

fish pipe

Pipe leading out to Delta waters where fish are released. Amy Quinton / Capital Public Radio

“The predators would really sit within a couple of feet from that pipe waiting for fish to come out,” says Javier Miranda, an environmental scientist with the Department of Water Resources.

A few years ago as part of a predation study, he lowered a sonar camera in the murky Delta waters to find out exactly what was going on.

“We thought there might be kind of a dinner bell effect where when they heard the truck drive up they’d all come up to the site,” he says.

 Like Pavlov’s fish, salivating.

“As it turned out, when the predators were there they were always there, they were waiting,” says Miranda.

Large-mouth bass, striped bass, Sacramento pikeminnow and other predators await most of the salvaged fish.

“We could see fish kind of coming out of the pipe and on a good day you would see them kind of swim off and other days when there was predators there you would see them get picked off,” he says.

The study also showed the predators were seasonal, showing up in the summer months when tens of thousands of fish would be released on any given day.

But if you’re a smelt, there is some good news.

“One of the good things we saw from our study was that during the months where we had endangered species like Delta smelt, salmon, we didn’t see a lot of predators at those sites.”

It’s still not a good fate for most salvaged fish.

Brent Bridges is a fish biologist at the Tracy fish facilities, part of the Bureau of Reclamation’s Central Valley Project.

They have the same problem at their release sites.  

Bridges says they’re now trying to trick the predators by turning on and off the pumps at the release site.

“The idea is that we want to prevent the fish, the predators, from realizing they’re going to be fed," says Bridges. "We just don’t want them to learn that when they hear the pump running they’re going to get fed.”

Bridges says biologists don’t know whether the predation at the release sites is actually affecting fish populations in the Delta.

But he says both the state and the federal water projects are building more release sites, so they can use a different site every day of the week.

Javier Miranda says studies show in the Delta predation is high and survival is low.

“So it’s kind of a trade off of predation in the river or predation in our salvage process," says Miranda. 

"Unfortunately, the science is just kind of getting caught up right now in terms of what’s better river versus salvage. But you could ask a lot of people and they’d say it’s better to have those fish go through the salvage process,”says Miranda.

He says for salmon, the salvage process is a short cut through the Delta out to the ocean.

But if you're a fragile smelt, the forces are against you, even if you make it to the holding tank.

Holding Tanks at the Skinner Fish Facility

Skinner Fish Facility Process

Fish Tanker Truck at the Release Site


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    The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta was once a vast tidal marshland and inland estuary. Now miles of fragile levees surround artificial islands below sea level. More than 90 percent of wetlands have disappeared, and native fish are dying.

 environment

Amy Quinton

Former Environment Reporter

Amy came to Sacramento from New Hampshire Public Radio (NHPR) where she was Environment Reporter. Amy has also reported for NPR member stations WFAE in Charlotte, WAMU in Washington D.C. and American Public Media's "Marketplace."  Read Full Bio 

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