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The hidden victim of the drought: California’s native fish

Last summer, a narrow, rock-rimmed stretch of the Sacramento River near Redding, Calif., turned into a mass graveyard for baby salmon.

Upstream releases of water from Shasta Dam were so warm that virtually an entire generation of endangered winter-run chinook (“winter-run” refers to the season when the adults enter freshwater) was wiped out. The eggs never hatched or, if they did, the emerging young soon died.

A similar disaster could unfold this year. And if the drought drags on for another year or two, wild populations of some of California’s most prized fish are likely to vanish…

Read the full article at The Washington Post.

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