HOMBROOK, Calif. - The California Department of Fish and Wildlife said that 830,000 young Chinook salmon, released from its Fall Creek Fish Hatchery in Siskiyou County, are presumed to have died due ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. California wildlife officials suspect ...
Large numbers of young Chinook salmon were found dead two days after being released from a state hatchery. But biologists say river conditions were okay and they were shocked by the die-off. Stay ...
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) said Saturday that 830,000 young Chinook salmon, released from its Fall Creek Fish Hatchery in Siskiyou County, are presumed to have died due to ...
A preliminary diagnosis attributes the fish kill discovered March 14 to gas supersaturation trauma resulting from heavy algae growth under a thin layer of snow-free ice. Numerous bubbles in the cheek ...
California wildlife officials suspect hundreds of thousands of fish released into a Siskiyou County river died from gas bubble disease on March 2. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife said ...
Fall-run chinook salmon that died after their release in the Klamath River were only months old and one or two inches in length, similar to these winter-run salmon reintroduced to the McCloud River ...
Hundreds of thousands of newly hatched salmon released into the Klamath River died passing through a dam due to be demolished, California wildlife officials reported. The 830,000 fish likely perished ...
Pressure changes in an outdated tunnel likely killed 830,000 salmon released into the Klamath River, California wildlife officials say. Xavier Mascareñas [email protected] Hundreds of thousands ...