Hydro Leader March 2021

Page 36

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Sunnyside Valley Irrigation District’s New Boom Fish Guidance System

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he Sunnyside Valley Irrigation District (SVID) provides irrigation water to 94,000 acres growing row crops, hops, grapes, and tree fruit in central Washington. As with many central Washington dams, SVID’s Sunnyside Dam poses challenges for juvenile fish survival. To address this problem, SVID is installing a new boom fish guidance system. In this interview, SVID General Manager Lori Brady gives Hydro Leader the details. Hydro Leader: Please tell us about SVID as a district and its infrastructure, particularly Sunnyside Dam. Lori Brady: SVID is located in the Yakima Valley in the southern part of central Washington. The 94,000‑acre project serves irrigation water to parts of Yakima and Benton Counties in the lower Yakima River Valley. The original diversion dam was constructed in 1878–79 by the Konewock Ditch Company. The first water diversion was in the spring of 1880 by Konewock Ditch Company. The Konewock headworks were later used by the Sunnyside Canal. Hydro Leader: What concerns does the Sunnyside Dam pose in terms of fish passage? The new gate will go downstream of this existing sluice gate.

Hydro Leader: When did SVID first decide to address this issue and what were the first steps it took?

36 | HYDRO LEADER | March 2021

Lori Brady: This issue first came to the district’s attention through a presentation. The first 2 years of a 3‑year smolt outmigration survival study were presented to SVID staff by Bureau of Reclamation staff in 2019. Several months later, the same presentation was given to the SVID board. After the presentation, the board realized that keeping salmon and steelhead smolts from entering the Sunnyside Main Canal was vital for improving their migration. It was an important issue that needed to be addressed, and the board wanted to be a part of the solution. Hydro Leader: How did SVID and its partners decide to go with the solution of a boom fish guidance system? What were the other options you considered? Lori Brady: Fish guidance systems are common at many hydro facilities throughout the Columbia River basin and other regions of the Pacific Northwest as a means to route salmon and steelhead smolts to fish collector systems or hydroleadermagazine.com

PHOTOS COURTESY OF SVID.

Lori Brady: The Sunnyside Dam Fish Passage Improvement Project seeks to improve salmon and steelhead smolt outmigration survival through the lower Yakima River. The ongoing Lower Yakima River Smolt Survival Study has identified serious mortality of juvenile salmon and steelhead associated with traveling through an irrigation diversion on their way down the Yakima River. Although the study is currently still underway, preliminary results showed that about 25 percent of yearling chinook smolts were also entrained at Sunnyside Dam, located at river mile 102.1, upstream of Prosser Dam. Preliminary data suggest that mortality rates at Sunnyside Main Canal are similar to those observed at Prosser Dam. The cumulative effects of smolts traveling through bypass systems at multiple dams (Roza, Wapato, Sunnyside, and Prosser) pose significant challenges for Yakima basin salmon runs. Improving smolt survival at water diversion dams is considered a key strategy for maintaining viable salmon and steelhead populations in the Yakima basin.


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