The Dusky Tail Darter chronicles & return of Levels to 723!

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The Dusky Tail Darter chronicles & return of Levels to 723!

Post by E_ »

I've not put much on here about the Dusky Tail Darter other than the first article on the 705 Levels but it seems more steam has built up on it. IMO it is indeed a issue since places like Fishing Creek Rec Area and Pulaski County park are still not optimal even at 705.

http://lakecumberlandboaters.com/forum/ ... f=3&t=6696 (705 article)



Below are some other stories from recent:
http://www.lakenews.com/News.asp?ID=E51 ... teID=KY005


Raise Lake Cumberland's water levels; bureaucrats ignore that tourism, endangered fish coexist


Kentucky.com - 3/23/2014 11:53:00 PM

This column was signed by state Sens. Chris Girdler and Sara Beth Gregory; Clinton County Judge-Executive Lyle K. Huff; Russell County Judge-Executive Gary D. Robertson; Burnside Mayor Ronald Jones; Pulaski County Judge-Executive Barty Bullock ...



Raise Lake Cumberland's water levels; bureaucrats ignore that tourism, endangered fish coexist

March 24, 2014


Lee's Ford Marina Resort on Lake Cumberland in Pulaski County.
LFM.jpg
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This column was signed by state Sens. Chris Girdler and Sara Beth Gregory; Clinton County Judge-Executive Lyle K. Huff; Russell County Judge-Executive Gary D. Robertson; Burnside Mayor Ronald Jones; Pulaski County Judge-Executive Barty Bullock; Bobby Clue, executive director of Somerset-Puaski County Chamber of Commerce; and Rick Mercader, chairman of the Clinton County Chamber of Commerce.




At issue: Feb. 11 Herald-Leader editorial, "Rogers' reason vs. McConnell fuming; Endangered fish won't hurt Lake Cumberland http://www.kentucky.com/2014/02/11/3080 ... ink=relast



Since 1952, the Lake Cumberland regional economy has drawn as many visitors annually as the Grand Canyon or Yellowstone National Park. Consequently, it has become our region's Toyota plant, our main economic engine.

In the automobile industry, brand damage deters customers. Lake Cumberland and local tourism are no different.

Unfortunately, this economic engine's branding as a tourist destination has been severely damaged in recent years due to perceived inadequate water levels and the imminent risk of failure of the Wolf Creek Dam.

In fact, the dam's potential failure was prominently featured on the History Channel's Mega-Disasters — not exactly the kind of media attention that says "ideal vacation spot."

Stakeholders and state leaders have been trying to address this economic disaster created by low water levels since it began in 2007. Even though Kentucky leaders from both parties in Congress, state government and the five local governments contiguous to the lake have all weighed in to stop this economic disaster, all attempts have been largely ignored by the Obama administration.

Some of the approaches proposed real and meaningful solutions, especially Gov. Steve Beshear's Lake Cumberland Economic Security Plan.

However, nothing has gotten the administration's attention thus far, reaffirming the notion for folks that President Barack Obama's war on Eastern and rural Kentucky truly does exist.

As the Herald-Leader editorialized on Dec. 25, 2012; "The Corps of Engineers has formally committed to mitigating economic effects of the drawdown, yet has shown little concern — some would say, it's shown animosity — toward the businesses that are going under."

We completely agree, despite the entire state of Kentucky speaking with one bipartisan voice, the only relief has been the Corps' 2013 announcement that the dam had finally been fixed and that normal water levels would return in 2014 after seven long years.

Now, the mere confirmation by a final survey that fish (including the duskytail darter) do in fact swim downstream has triggered an enormous amount of red tape for the Army Corps and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and has delayed the return of normal water levels at Lake Cumberland — yet again plunging its people, their livelihoods and futures into uncertainty and turmoil.

However, Lake Cumberland's economy and the duskytail darter had previously thrived in peace and harmony since 1952. The darters' pristine habitat on the Big South Fork River begins at Blue Heron and runs upriver to Station Camp, Tenn.

The river's elevation at Blue Heron is 734 feet and the river bed is 723 feet, the normal summer pool for the lake. Therefore it is, and has always been, impossible for normal lake level operations to harm the darter. Nevertheless, the federal agencies say we can't normalize the water levels.

Sen. Mitch McConnell, using his stature as Senate minority leader, has done a brilliant job of exposing this absurdity and we fully support his actions, but the lesson to be drawn is much larger. It is about the devastating impacts large federal bureaucracies with unchecked power and insane amounts of red tape are having on our nation's economy.

"Every day," as Secretary of Defense Robert Gates told Obama in the first weeks of his presidency, "someone, somewhere, in the federal government is screwing up."

Federal government agencies have become too big to be responsive to the people. It's so pervasive that even when red tape absurdity is exposed by our elected officials on a national scale, these officials must continue to hound away publicly before agencies eventually listen and we see results. This cannot be how our government was intended to work — against the people.

The right solution to fix this dam problem is clear. Keep the federal government's written word to the people and the fish: they coexisted for 55 years before this disaster. Immediately cut the red tape, mitigate the darter issue, announce the return to normal water levels and mitigate the economic damage by committing to fully implement Beshear's plan.

The darter will continue to thrive. The people can begin thriving again by rebuilding the economy and putting people back to work.

This column was signed by state Sens Chris Girdler and Sara Beth Gregory; Clinton County Judge Executive Lyle K. Huff; Russell County Judge Executive Gary D. Robertson; Burnside Mayor Ronald Jones; Pulaski County Judge Executive Barty Bullock; Bobby Clue, executive director of Somerset-Puaski County Chamber of Commerce; and Rick Mercader, chairman of the Clinton County Chamber of Commerce.

Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2014/03/24/3157 ... rylink=cpy





http://www.lakenews.com/News.asp?ID=58E ... teID=KY005


Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Art Lander’s Outdoors: Presence of duskytail darter linked to return of free-flowing river

Duskytail darter (Photo by Dick Biggins, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)
Etheostoma_percnurum_duskytail_darterDick-Biggins-UFWS1.jpg
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When Lake Cumberland was lowered in 2007 to make repairs to a leaking Wolf Creek Dam there was some speculation among biologists that the change in water level might be attractive to endangered species in the tributary streams.


“There are quite a few listed species in the Cumberland. We thought some of them might take advantage of the river habitat created when the lake was lowered,” said Lee Andrews of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.


Last fall, federal biologists sampling about five miles of the Big South Fork embayment of Lake Cumberland, in the former lake bed, found the duskytail darter (Etheostoma percnurum), an endangered species that has been federally listed since April 27, 1993.


“It was an aquatic species survey,” said Don Getty, project manager for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Nashville. “We were expecting to find endangered mussels. It was a surprise that we found the duskytail darter.”
The survey was agreed to, and funded by, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, as part of the environmental impact statement for the dam safety project.


According to the USFWS Kentucky Ecological Services Field Station website, there are 50 federally threatened and endangered species in Kentucky, as of Jan. 24. This includes four endangered darters. View the complete list here.


The logical conclusion is that the darters, which biologists have known about for years in Big South Fork of the Cumberland River, simply moved downstream to take advantage of the newly-created habitat — a free-flowing stream in its natural state. That’s the only explanation that puts this rare species in an area that had been inundated by lake waters basically since the early 1950s.


“These darters can’t tolerate standing water or silt,” said Matthew Thomas, ichthyologist for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. “They need moving water, clean gravel swept free of silt and saucer-sized flat rocks to spawn beneath.”


The fish itself is something of a mystery.


“The four populations look alike, but they are different,” said Andrews. “Through genetic work they were split into four species.” For legal purposes, the species group is referred to as duskytail darter.


Fishery scientists knew of the existence of the duskytail darter since the late 1960s, but the species was not formally described and named until 1994. Today, isolated populations are only found in the Tennessee and Cumberland drainages in Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia.


In 2008 three new species in the group were named, including the Tuxedo Darter (Etheostoma lemniscatum) which is the fish sampled from the former lake bed last fall. “Presumably, the Tuxedo Darter occurred throughout the Big South Fork, but there’s no evidence that it was ever in any other of the Cumberland River tributary streams, such as the Rockcastle River,” said Thomas.


The duskytail darter reaches a length of 2 1/2 inches and has a relatively short life span of just two years. It inhabits warm, clear, slow-running water from large creeks to medium-sized rivers with gravel, rubble, or boulder bottoms.


Formerly more widespread, the range of the Duskytail Darter has been fragmented by impoundments, siltation and pollution.


Coloration is dull. The top of the head is gray, the belly is white, and there are vertical lines down the sides.


The spawning season is April through May. The female lays one cluster of up to 200 eggs on the flattened underside of a rock. During incubation the male cleans and protects the cluster of eggs.


The diet of the young fish is micocrustaceans and larvae of aquatic invertebrates. Adults eat aquatic invertebrate larvae and will sometimes eat fish eggs.


At first the discovery of the rare darter seemed to put the brakes on the return to Lake Cumberland to its traditional summer pool elevation of 723.


This is because of language in Endangered Species Act, which is designed to protect critically imperiled species from extinction.


In the last two months the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the USFWS have been discussing ways to limit adverse impacts on the fish.


Getty said no announcement about the lake level will be made until the formal consultations with the USFWS are complete and a plan has been accepted.


“We’ve made great progress in a short amount of time,” said Getty. “I fully expect to get the green light to raise the lake.”


One argument for bringing the lake back up to elevation 723 might be that finding these fish in the former lake bed represents a population expansion. Bringing the lake back up may restrict available habitat, but does not put the survival of the species in jeopardy.


1Art Lander Jr.Art Lander Jr. is outdoors editor for KyForward. He is a native Kentuckian, a graduate of Western Kentucky University and a life-long hunter, angler, gardener and nature enthusiast. He has worked as a newspaper columnist, magazine journalist and author and is a former staff writer for Kentucky Afield Magazine, editor of the annual Kentucky Hunting & Trapping Guide and Kentucky Spring Hunting Guide, and co-writer of the Kentucky Afield Outdoors newspaper column.





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Re: The Dusky Tail Darter chronicles. LAKE COMING BACK UP!!

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http://www.lrn.usace.army.mil/Media/New ... ves-p.aspx

Fish and Wildlife Service completes Biological Opinion and the Corps approves plan to raise Lake Cumberland water level

Posted 3/25/2014
Release no. 14-004


Contact
Bill Peoples (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
615-736-7161
william.l.peoples@usace.army.mil
or
Tom MacKenzie (U.S. Fish and Wildllife Service)
404-679-7292
tom_mackenzie@fws.gov



NASHVILLE, Tenn. (March 25, 2014) – Working closely with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers over the past few months, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Monday finalized the Biological Opinion that clears the way for the Corps to resume normal operations at Lake Cumberland immediately.

With formal consultation complete, today Brig. Gen. Margaret Burcham, commanding general, Great Lakes and Ohio River Division, made the decision to allow Lake Cumberland to rise to a target elevation of 723 feet this summer, which is the normal elevation at the beginning of the recreation season. The Corps and staff from the Service’s Kentucky Field Office implemented an expedited review and analysis process to complete the Biological Opinion in less than 45 days. The normal consultation process allows up to 135 days. The Biological Opinion is posted at http://www.fws.gov/southeast/.

“As a result of the Biological Opinion and Brig. Gen. Burcham’s decision to increase the pool elevation, we will begin immediately to capture water in Lake Cumberland,” said Lt. Col. John Hudson, commander, Nashville District. “Reaching our target peak elevation of 723 feet this year will be dependent on the amount and timing of rainfall.”

The completion of the Biological Opinion was the final piece of information required to make a decision about the Lake Cumberland pool level. The dam safety remedial measures had previously been reviewed by Corps dam safety professionals, who recommended returning the lake to normal operations for 2014.

The Corps discovered the duskytail darter, listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act, during a required biological survey associated with the dam safety project at Wolf Creek Dam. Duskytail darters were found at seven new locations in the headwaters portion of the Big South Fork embayment in Lake Cumberland in stream habitat that was exposed during the drawdown.

“Collectively, these measures will help minimize impacts to the species and ensure the duskytail darter’s future survival in the Big South Fork,” said Lee Andrews, Field Office supervisor for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Kentucky. “We understand the recreational and economic importance of Lake Cumberland in southeast Kentucky and have worked closely with the Corps to expedite this review. This is another good example of how our implementation of the Endangered Species Act can balance economic and other human needs with the needs of our rarest species.”

The Corps and the Service agreed to move forward with three primary conservation measures that were essential to the Service’s analysis of the project’s effects on the duskytail darter. The three conservation measures are: Capture and Hold – capturing duskytail darters and establishing a temporary, captive population of the species for future recovery efforts of the darter; Water Quality/Habitat Improvement – the Corps will remediate two acid mine drainages on tributaries of the Big South Fork and also complete one sediment abatement/soil stabilization project; and Interim Dam Adjustment - the Corps will modify operations at the Wolf Creek Dam to follow the Top Southeastern Power Administrative (SEPA) Curve during the Winter and Spring filling cycle with an overall goal of reaching elevation 723 around the middle of May. This interim operation will last for a minimum of three years, or longer, if the water quality improvements have not been completed.

The darters will be maintained and propagated at Wolf Creek National Fish Hatchery in Russell County as part of the recovery effort and will, over time, be used in reintroduction or population augmentation efforts. Any reintroduction effort will require additional coordination with participating agencies.

The mission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working with others to conserve, protect, and enhance fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people. For more information on our work and the people who make it happen, visit www.fws.gov. Connect with our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/usfwssoutheast, follow our tweets at www.twitter.com/usfwssoutheast, watch our YouTube Channel at http://www.youtube.com/usfws and download photos from our Flickr page at http://www.flickr.com/photos/usfwssoutheast.

The public can obtain news, updates and information from the U.S. Army Corps Nashville District website at www.lrn.usace.army.mil and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/nashvillecorps.

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Re: The Dusky Tail Darter chronicles & return of Levels to 7

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I hope the little fellers dont drown. =))
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Re: The Dusky Tail Darter chronicles & return of Levels to 7

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:ymapplause: :ymapplause: :ymapplause:
"The language of friendship is not words but meaning." (Henry David Thoreau)
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Re: The Dusky Tail Darter chronicles & return of Levels to 7

Post by E_ »

Preview from last night, I'll try to upload the full interview/story tonight. Its on the local news sites. I just like to have my own copy. sorry about the poor audio. Enjoy the lake vid clips.
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Re: The Dusky Tail Darter chronicles & return of Levels to 7

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Re: The Dusky Tail Darter chronicles & return of Levels to 7

Post by E_ »

EyeRoll,
http://www.somerset-kentucky.com/news/s ... 7287a.html
There was some concern during a dry period the first of April that lack of precipitation would keep Lake Cumberland from reaching pool stage as scheduled on May 15.

Not to worry. Five to 7 inches of rain the last of April and first of May sent the lake above the tree line.

The sudden flush of water in the Cumberland River Basin got the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers scurrying to bring the water level back down to pool stage in line with an agreement with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect the duskytail darter.


The agreement was reached because of discovery that federally endangered duskytail darters had moved habitats into parts of the Big South River in McCreary County while the lake was kept low for seven years to facilitate repairs at Wolf Creek Dam. Dillingham said if the lake gets higher that 723 feet above sea level, it pushes water back into the Big South Fork and inundates habitats of duskytail darters. The minnows live in running water and can’t survive in still waters of a lake.

Discovery of the minnows on the endangered species list almost kept the lake lower than normal during the summer of 2014. Tourism interests were appalled that the dam had been fixed and something in their minds as insignificant as a minnow would hurt business by keeping the lake low yet another summer. The fuss reached the Halls of Congress and pressure was put on the Corps to find a solution. Thus the agreement between the Corps and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that provided for an improvement in duskytail habitat and sent a sampling of darters to Conservation Fisheries in Knoxville where hopefully propagation will take place.

The Corps apparently is doing all it can to keep the lake at 723 or below.


“We ran all six generator (in Wolf Creek Dam) 24 hours a day, seven days a week,” said Robert Dillingham, hydraulic engineer at the Corps’ Nashville District headquarters. The lake level was still at 724.28 feet above sea level Tuesday and at times only 20 cubic feet of water per second were being released through the dam.

“Top of the power pool is 723 feet and we’re trying to get back to that,” Dillingham said.

Lake Cumberland normally operates on what is called a SEPA curve, acronym for Southeastern Power Administration, marketer of hydroelectric power produced at Wolf Creek Dam.

Dillingham pointed out the SEPA curve calls for the lake to be at 700 feet above sea level on February 1 and rise to 723 feet above sea level by May 15. It then slowly falls throughout the summer
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