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Salmon's Comeback Pits Nature Against Trump Administration
Salmon have returned to historic spawning grounds after dam removal, but federal cuts and water allocation favoring farmers threaten ongoing restoration, with over 7,700 fish counted last year.
Summary by Phys.org
3 Articles
3 Articles
Salmon's comeback pits nature against Trump administration
For the first time in more than a century, migrating salmon have climbed close to the headwaters of the Klamath River's most far-flung tributaries, as much as 360 miles from the Pacific Ocean in south-central Oregon. The achievement is the clearest indication yet that the world's largest dam removal project, completed on the river a year ago, will yield major benefits for salmon, the river ecosystem, and the tribes and commercial fishers whose l…
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For the first time in more than a century, migrating salmon have climbed close to the headwaters of the Klamath River’s most far-flung tributaries, as much as 360 miles from the Pacific Ocean in south-central Oregon. The achievement is the ...
Coverage Details
Total News Sources3
Leaning Left1Leaning Right1Center1Last UpdatedBias Distribution34% Left, 33% Center, 33% Right
Bias Distribution
- 34% of the sources lean Left, 33% of the sources are Center, 33% of the sources lean Right
34% Left
L 34%
C 33%
R 33%
Factuality
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