OpinionDecember 20, 2023

Carbon dioxide answers

The article (Tribune online, Nov. 14) about sperm whales pooping in the ocean and creating algae blooms that trap carbon dioxide when the algae sinks to the bottom of the ocean, seems to be an answer to cutting down on carbon dioxide.

If this is the case, then dumping our raw sewage into lakes and oceans should help greatly. I didn’t notice people jumping for joy when there was an algae bloom in the Snake River or when red tide hits the coast and makes seafood inedible.

However, doesn’t organic matter decaying on the ocean floor produce methane? And isn’t methane many times worse for the environment?

As to whales in the article pooping twice as much as other whales, can someone tell me how whale poop is measured? Is it by the pound, gallon or squirt?

Jack McHargue

Troy

Wrong dam plan

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Do you remember the idiom, “You are barking up the wrong tree?” Well, the same is true about the lower Snake River dams when it comes to salmon and steelhead preservation. You are barking at the wrong dams and here is why.

In the planning of the Hells Canyon complex in 1953, Idaho fish biologist Forrest Hauck indicated the building of the Hells Canyon dams would eliminate any chinook salmon and steelhead above the dams from their prime spawning grounds. The elimination of spawning grounds on the Snake River began in 1901 with Swan Falls Dam, Bliss Dam, completed in 1950, and C.J. Strike Dam in 1952. None included fish ladders.

The first on the middle Snake River was Brownlee Dam completed in 1958 by Idaho Power Co. Thousands of salmon passed, before this dam prevented upstream migration.

A quote from Fred Mensik’s book reads, “The river substrate of the remaining habitat below Brownlee Dam is poor compared to that of the prime spawning ground above Brownlee Dam. Additionally, the Thousand Springs offered consistent water temperatures, key to successful fall chinook spawning.”

Oxbow Dam, completed in 1961, and Hells Canyon Dam in 1967 are past their 50-year operating license. They aren’t federal dams and don’t require an act of Congress to remove. They have eliminated 90% of the prime spawning grounds for chinook.

So if you really want the return of fish to rebound in acceptable numbers, tear out these dams. The lower Snake River dams are not the problem.

Marvin J. Entel

Clarkston

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