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February 10th, 2003 Your questions and answers about everything stream related.
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Q. From Ray in California...:When a salmon or steelhead cannot return to it's original spawning ground due to not enough water in the system, what happens? Does it spawn somewhere nearby? Not at all? The Shasta and Scott Rivers here in Northern California will not get the allotted water needed for returning spawners this year. Where will these fish go?
A.
Returning spawners that can't reach their natal stream,
will usually attempt to spawn in any nearby suitable
reach of stream or river. In fact, there is a fairly
large "stray rate" of fish that can't reach their original
spawning sites; they either drop down lower in the stream
to spawn or even spawn in other nearby streams. A good
example of this was seen after the Mt. St. Helens eruption.
Returning fish in the Toutle River found many things
blocking their way - adverse water quality, physical
obstruction, etc. These fish dropped down and entered
other tributaries to spawn.
~ C. E. (Bert) Cushing, aka Streamdoctor
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