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KRIS Klamath : Picture Page

Area Middle Klamath
Topic Tour: USFS Restoration Structures Beaver Cr (Middle) 1994 #1
 

bv21041.jpg 96K  Click on image to enlarge (96K).

The wood structures shown in the photo were cabled to large boulders already in the stream to provide cover for juvenile salmonids. Their small size makes it unlikely that they survived the January 1997 storm event. These projects were part of fish habitat enhancement funded by the California Wildlife Conservation Board and installed by the U.S. Forest Service, Klamath National Forest, Oak Knoll Ranger District. Work was completed in 1992 and evaluation photos taken in 1994. Photo courtesy of USFS Oak Knoll RD.


bv21239.jpg 110K  Click on image to enlarge (110K).

The wood structures shown in the photo were cabled to large boulders already in the stream to provide cover for juvenile salmonids. These projects were part of fish habitat enhancement funded by the California Wildlife Conservation Board and installed by the U.S. Forest Service, Klamath National Forest, Oak Knoll Ranger District. Work was completed in 1992 and evaluation photos taken in 1994. Photo courtesy of USFS Oak Knoll RD.


bv33860.jpg 94K  Click on image to enlarge (94K).

The boulder weir in the photo was part of fish habitat enhancement funded by the California Wildlife Conservation Board and installed by the U.S. Forest Service, Klamath National Forest, Oak Knoll Ranger District. Work was completed in 1992 and evaluation photos taken in 1994. Photo courtesy of USFS Oak Knoll RD.


bv34547.jpg 90K  Click on image to enlarge (90K).

The boulder weir and clusters in the photo were part of fish habitat enhancement funded by the California Wildlife Conservation Board and installed by the U.S. Forest Service, Klamath National Forest, Oak Knoll Ranger District. Work was completed in 1992 and evaluation photos taken in 1994. Photo courtesy of USFS Oak Knoll RD. Note encroaching riparian vegetation which has resulted in part from several consecutive dry years (1986-1994).


bv63981.jpg 115K  Click on image to enlarge (115K).

The wood structures shown in the photo were cabled to large boulders already in the stream to provide cover for juvenile salmonids. Their small size makes it unlikely that they survived the January 1997 storm event. Note patches of decomposed granitic sand (blond color) near the center of the stream channel. These projects were part of fish habitat enhancement funded by the California Wildlife Conservation Board and installed by the U.S. Forest Service, Klamath National Forest, Oak Knoll Ranger District. Work was completed in 1992 and evaluation photos taken in 1994. Photo courtesy of USFS Oak Knoll RD.


bv64225.jpg 85K  Click on image to enlarge (85K).

The wood structures shown in the photo were cabled to large boulders already in the stream to provide cover for juvenile salmonids. These projects were part of fish habitat enhancement funded by the California Wildlife Conservation Board and installed by the U.S. Forest Service, Klamath National Forest, Oak Knoll Ranger District. Work was completed in 1992 and evaluation photos taken in 1994. Note patches of decomposed granitic sand (blond color) near the center of the stream channel. Photo courtesy of USFS Oak Knoll RD.


bv64255.jpg 102K  Click on image to enlarge (102K).

The wood structures shown in the photo were cabled to large boulders already in the stream to provide cover for juvenile salmonids. Their small size and the high stream energy in this reach make it unlikely that they survived the January 1997 storm event. These projects were part of fish habitat enhancement funded by the California Wildlife Conservation Board and installed by the U.S. Forest Service, Klamath National Forest, Oak Knoll Ranger District. Work was completed in 1992 and evaluation photos taken in 1994. Photo courtesy of USFS Oak Knoll RD.


bv64853.jpg 121K  Click on image to enlarge (121K).

The wood structures shown in the photo were cabled to large boulders already in the stream to provide cover for juvenile salmonids. These projects were part of fish habitat enhancement funded by the California Wildlife Conservation Board and installed by the U.S. Forest Service, Klamath National Forest, Oak Knoll Ranger District. Work was completed in 1992 and evaluation photos taken in 1994. Photo courtesy of USFS Oak Knoll RD.




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