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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Students
visit outdoor lab Pleasant autumn
weather greeted Mountain View High School students for an outdoor laboratory
at Riverside campground last month.
They were part of biology
teacher Ken Johnson's watershed ecology field trip sponsored by Oregon
Trout as part of their Salmon Watch program.
"We wanted students to have
the experience of seeing first hand the interaction between plants, aquatic
insects, fish, forest and Metolius River," said Johnson. "Our focus on
the fish is because they are spawning at this time and highlight a biological
process in action."
Student teams of three or
four rotated from Steve Marx's description of the Kokanee salmon, taken
directly from the river, to Jerry Honl and Dick Sternitz, both from Central
Oregon Flyfishers, who helped students find and identify aquatic insects
and other invertebrate animals.
In between, students did chemical
testing of Metolius River water for dissolved oxygen, pH (acid-base analysis)
and other tests.
Karen Swirsky and Shirley
Walkey, from David Evans and Associates, a civil engineering firm, discussed
riparian vegetation with student groups. They were assisted by Greg Ketner,
student teacher, in botanical descriptions of plants seen by students.
"Salmon Watch is designed
to foster a strong recognition of salmon as an important indicator of
watershed health," said Tom Tattam, regional coordinator for Oregon Trout.
The Kokanee salmon are land
locked and make the Metolius River their home. They travel between Lake
Billy Chinook, the Metolius River and smaller tributaries, reaching Suttle
Lake in earlier times when passage was freer.
The group had lunch and finished
their day visiting the Headwaters of the Metolius that is located near
Riverside campground.
Riverside Campground is located
off Highway 14 -- about one mile from downtown Camp Sherman. Originally
a Civilian Conservation Corps camp in the 1930s, it is now a 16-site Forest
Service public tent campground and makes a lovely spot to enjoy the forest,
wild and scenic Metolius River or a picnic lunch.
Founded in 1983, Oregon Trout
works to protect and restore native fish and their habitats. Contact Tom
Tattam at 541-753-4280 for more information. |
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