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“Low Flows, Hot Trout"

Report Details Climate Change in Clark Fork Watershed


By Robert Struckman, 7-17-08

Click the image to download the PDF

A new report by the Missoula-based nonprofit Clark Fork Coalition provides a comprehensive view of how global climate change has affected - and will likely affect - western Montana and north Idaho.

“We view this as a starting point for discussion and a motivator for action,” said Clark Fork Coalition director Karen Knudsen. Temperatures in the report’s coverage area increased, on average by 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit over the past 50 years and may well continue to warm, over the next 100 years, by another 5.4 degrees.

The 36-page report, entitled “Low Flows, Hot Trout” (opens PDF), lays out its information on the Clark Fork River’s watershed in a business-like way. It starts with temperatures and precipitation and then goes into the water with stream flows and snow and extends into the backcountry with wildfires and wildlife.

Almost everyone has anecdotes about how climate change plays out - whether it’s the wildfires or the warm autumns or the longer gardening season. This report uses a broad array of data, and then puts those anecdotes into context. The rivers are getting warmer. The glaciers are receding. The growing season is getting longer.

“It turns out that we’re undergoing a big shift,” Knudsen said. The data strongly suggests the warming trend will have a significant impact on the region. It’ll punish those things - wolverines and arctic graylings among them - that rely on a colder world. It could also prompt more conflicts between humans and wildlife.

For instance, as the whitebark pines continue to suffer from beetle infestations, its oil-rich pine nut will not be available for grizzlies in the fall. Those grizzlies will need to search elsewhere for food, perhaps in apple orchards or other places close to people.

But warmer weather will be kinder to other species. Whitetail deer and elk are able to forage more easily on bushes that get buried by snow during long, cold winters. And wolves may flourish, too.

The fully sourced report, which cost about $30,000 to produce, also provides a general blueprint for mitigating the impacts of the warming trend by getting a handle on development, protecting vital areas for wildlife and conserving water, so more can remain in the rivers.

“We want to lead a discussion about investing in restoration dollars, about healthy and resilient rivers and land-use decisions, and where we want to build and develop,” Knudsen said.

The report forms the basis of a campaign which Knudsen said will take her and others of her 1,500-member organization to 12 communities over the next six weeks throughout the region, from Deer Lodge to Sandpoint and beyond.

“At this point, we’re looking to fill the community dialogue gap,” Knudsen said. “There’s no reason why we have to stand on the sidelines.”

On July 29, from noon to 1:15 p.m., the Clark Fork Coalition will launch the publication with a free luncheon, open to the public, at its offices at 104 S. 4th St. W. The Coalition is also planning a summit on this subject in the fall.

The Clark Fork Coalition is a 1,500-member organization with a staff of seven and an annual budget of about $540,000. Its money comes, in roughly equal parts, from charitable foundations and members. Its mission is to protect and restore the Clark Fork watershed.



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