Lodi News-Sentinel

Delta smelt at heart of California’s water debate

- By Ryan Sabalow and Dale Kasler

SACRAMENTO — As a young biologist in the 1970s, Peter Moyle remembers towing nets behind boats in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and catching 50 to 100 translucen­t, finger-length smelt in a matter of minutes.

Moyle doesn’t see those days coming back.

“I think extinction is imminent the way things are going,” said Moyle, a prominent University of California, Davis fisheries biologist.

State biologists have found hardly any Delta smelt in their sampling nets in the past two years. Consecutiv­e surveys in late April and early May found no smelt at all.

Those results don’t mean the smelt have completely vanished. But biologists say the California Department of Fish and Wildlife surveys provide disappoint­ing evidence that the critically endangered fish are edging closer to extinction. The hope was the fish would show signs of recovery after three comparativ­ely wet winters, including the drought-ending record rains of 2017.

Delta smelt are at the heart of the tensions over California’s water supply and the health of the West Coast’s largest estuary.

Giant pumps near Tracy funnel Delta water to 25 million people in Southern California and the Bay Area. They also send water to 3 million acres of San Joaquin Valley farmland.

To protect smelt from getting sucked into the pumps, they often get throttled back or shut off altogether. As a result, water earmarked for the south state flows out to the Pacific Ocean, outraging farmers and other water users. Pumping also alters the Delta smelt’s habitat.

Gov. Jerry Brown has made the smelt’s survival a talking point in his crusade for the controvers­ial Delta tunnels project, which he says would help the fish while stabilizin­g declining water deliveries. However, Washington might have other priorities. Campaignin­g before cheering crowds in Fresno in 2016, President Donald Trump promised to “open up the water” for farmers and mocked “a certain kind of three inch fish.”

The smelt’s dwindling numbers could affect a proposal by the State Water Resource Control Board to restrict pumping even more and leave more water in the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers.

Farm lobbyists say the latest survey results provide further evidence of what they have argued for years: Providing more water for smelt doesn’t prop up their sagging population.

Chris Scheuring, counsel at the California Farm Bureau Federation, said farmers aren’t rooting for the smelt’s demise. But he said that if the smelt are declared extinct at some point, it would probably loosen some of the restrictio­ns on operating the estuary’s pumps.

 ?? RANDY PENCH/SACRAMENTO BEE FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Delta smelt kept alive in hatcheries like these fish photograph­ed in 2015 at the UC Davis Fish Conservati­on and Culture Lab in Byron may be all that’s left of the species. Fishery officials say Delta smelt this year plummeted perilously close to...
RANDY PENCH/SACRAMENTO BEE FILE PHOTOGRAPH Delta smelt kept alive in hatcheries like these fish photograph­ed in 2015 at the UC Davis Fish Conservati­on and Culture Lab in Byron may be all that’s left of the species. Fishery officials say Delta smelt this year plummeted perilously close to...

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