Once a tragic example of degraded wildlife habitat, the Klamath River’s dam removal demonstrates how people can halt the ...
After being absent for more than a century, salmon have been spotted in Oregon's Klamath River Basin, following a mammoth dam ...
The removal of four dams over the past year has opened up fascinating stretches of river, wild rapids and views of salmon.
Officials in California and Oregon are already seeing coho and chinook salmon returning to the now free-flowing upper Klamath ...
In Northern California, the Gensaw brothers — members of the Yurok tribe — host an outdoor salmon cookout to celebrate a huge ...
Salmon fish have made a highly anticipated comeback to Oregon's Klamath River Basin after more than a century.According to ...
The California Department of Fish & Wildlife says that the returning Coho salmon are being kept at the Fall Creek Hatchery ...
Read Next: Breach or Die: It’s Time to Free the Lower Snake River and Save Idaho’s Wild Salmon The Klamath’s salmon and steelhead returns should be even better in the years to come ...
Coho salmon in the Klamath Basin are listed as a threatened species under both state and federal endangered species acts.
In October, fish biologists at Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife identified an autumn-run Chinook salmon in a tributary to the Klamath River, upstream from where the J C Boyle Dam once stood.