Sacramento, CA — The Delta Smelt, once the most abundant fish species in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, is virtually extinct in the wild, due to massive water exports to agribusiness and other factors over the past several decades. Zero smelt have been caught over the past six years in the California Department of Fish and Game’s Fall Midwater Trawl Survey.
With the start of the new water year today, representatives of fishing and environmental groups blasted the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) and U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) for cancelling the fall flow protections for the few remaining Delta Smelt.
October 1, is the start of the new “water year,” the date water managers use to mark the end of the dry season and the beginning of the wet.
Current state and federal Endangered Species Act (ESA) permits require DWR and Reclamation to release a pulse of water through the Delta to the San Francisco Bay in September and October to improve habitat conditions for the listed Delta Smelt, according to a statement from environmental and fishing groups. This fall outflow requirement is only triggered in years when it is wetter than normal and is often referred to as “Fall X2.”
The groups pointed out that some the state’s largest Delta water exporters wrote to the agencies in August, requesting the suspension of Fall X2, despite Delta Smelt populations collapsing to record low levels in recent years.
The broad coalition of environmental and fishing groups said Reclamation ignored them when they said that acquiescing to the water users would be the “next step towards extinction.” Instead, advocates said “they moved forward with cutting short one of the only actions that could help the imperiled species at this time of year.”
“The Fall X2 outflow action uses the bounty of a wetter year to provide a rare measure of relief and recuperation — colder water, more food for Delta fish, and better water quality,” the groups revealed.
They also said the massive pumping facilities operated by DWR’s State Water Project and Reclamation’s Central Valley Project are ramping back up to export even more water to San Joaquin Valley corporate agribusiness and Southern California water agencies. The water operations are still largely operating under rules — a biological opinion — written by the Trump administration. The state and many environmental groups challenged the biological opinion because it ignored legal requirements and discarded the “best available science.
Reclamation and DWR accused of implementing “Trump era water policies”
Representatives of the groups slammed DWR and Reclamation for putting the final nails in the coffin of the Delta Smelt.
“It is incredibly disappointing to see the Newsom and Biden administrations willing to implement Trump-era water policies,” said Ashley Overhouse, Water Policy Advisor with Defenders of Wildlife. “This decision marks a somber start to the new water year, undercutting years of collaborative work to ensure the best available science is informing our water management decisions.”
Gary Bobker, Senior Policy Director at Friends of the River, agreed with Overhouse.
”At this time next year, we may be looking at the extinction of a fish species that was once incredibly abundant when the Bay-Delta Estuary was healthy, and it will have been completely preventable, because we know a lot about what it takes to restore the Estuary’s health,” noted Bobker.
Fish advocates said the “best available science” indicates that a “variety of complementary actions” — such as improving summer and fall outflows, expanding tidal marsh habitat, and operating salinity control gates differently — are all needed to prevent the Delta Smelt’s extinction. DWR and Reclamation are only prioritizing Smelt survival if it doesn’t involve using any water.”
“DWR and Reclamation conveniently neglected to propose improving summer outflow this year, an ‘adaptive management’ decision that would have scientific justification,” noted Eric Buescher, Managing Attorney with San Francisco Baykeeper. “Instead, they are quelling the October fall outflow action — and with it, possibly, the survival of Delta Smelt itself.”
Cancelling the fall flow action in 2024 marks the second consecutive year in which wet-year protections for fish have been waived, according to Chris Shutes, Executive Director of the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance.
“The rules protecting fish only work when they are enforced,” said Shutes. “But adaptive mis-management is making the rules optional each time water contractors clamor for more water.”
Salmon, steelhead and other fish are in deep trouble also
Smelt aren’t the only fish species in trouble, advocates point out. “DWR and Reclamation have killed countless steelhead and salmon on several occasions in 2024, exceeding the legal limits of their ESA permits,” the groups said
“The last two years recorded some of the lowest numbers of spawning salmon ever in the Sacramento River. Central Valley fall-run Chinook Salmon numbers are so low that it required two closures in a row of the California coastal salmon fishing season, threatening tens of thousands of California and coastal Oregon salmon fishing jobs,” they added.
In response to the agencies decision to change Delta operations, Scott Artis, Executive Director of the Golden State Salmon Association stated: “For the salmon fishing industry, this decision is infuriating. Years of reckless water project operations have in turn severely impacted the lives of our communities that depend on healthy salmon runs.”
“Fish like salmon and Delta Smelt are our ‘canary in the coal mine.’ When will the agencies realize they are jeopardizing our future? They slashed protections for fish during the drought. Now they’re doing the same in a wet year. They are preparing to permanently exacerbate conditions for salmon with new ESA permits that are even worse than those adopted under the Trump administration,” he argued.
Barbara Barrigan-Parilla, Executive Director for Restore the Delta, concluded, “Once again, government agencies are changing the rules to weaken Delta protections for powerful special economic interests, rather than striving to save the largest estuary on the West Coast of the Americas for the people.”
Water Contractors are “extremely pleased”
On the other hand, Jennifer Pierre, General Manager of the State Water Contractors, said her organization was “extremely pleased with the decision to rely on the full body of scientific evidence to assess the value of Fall X2 releases and adjust October operations accordingly.”
“ This adjustment ensures the same protections for fish and water quality as those contemplated in the ITP and 2019 BiOp while smartly protecting water supplies. We applaud state leaders for their continued commitment to science-based decision-making and ensuring adaptive management in the Delta is more than just a catchphrase,” she continued in a statement.
“The cost of releasing additional water in the few years Fall X2 has been implemented has had varying—but significant—costs to our water supply by releasing stored water and cutting exports to test the Fall X2 adaptive management action’s potential benefits to Delta smelt. In 2023 alone, the State Water Project sent 600,000 acre-feet to the ocean to implement the Fall X2 requirement,” Pierre claimed.
Delta Smelt is a key indicator species
Disparaged as a “little minnow” by agribusiness oligarchs, right wing talking heads like Sean Hannity and former President Trump, the key role the Delta Smelt plays in the ecosystem can’t be overemphasized.
”Delta Smelt are the thread that ties the Delta together with the river system,” Caleen Sisk, Chief of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe, said several years ago. “We all should understand how that affects all the water systems in the state. They are the irreplaceable thread that holds the Delta system together with Chinook salmon.”
For the sixth year in a row, no Delta Smelt were collected in the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s Fall Midwater Trawl (FMWT) Survey in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta from September through December 2023. This year’s survey is also expected to produce no Delta Smelt
The 2 to 3 inch fish, found only in the Delta, is an “indicator species” that shows the relative health of the San Francisco Bay/Delta ecosystem. When no Delta Smelt are found in six years of a survey that has been conducted since 1967, the estuary is in a serious ecological crisis.
The Delta smelt is listed as “endangered” under both the federal Endangered Species Act and the California Endangered Species Act.
“No Delta Smelt were collected at any stations from September through December,” reported Taylor Rohlin, Environmental Scientist for the CDFW Bay Delta Region, in a memo published on Jan. 25 of this year. “The 2023 September-December index (0) is tied with 2018-2022 as the lowest index in FMWT history.”
She said the absence of Delta Smelt catch in the FMWT is “consistent among other surveys in the estuary.”
For example, the Enhanced Delta Smelt Monitoring (EDSM) survey of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) caught only 5 Delta Smelt among 10 sampling weeks (between 9/4 and 11/10 2023) comprised of 1,360 tows (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 2023).
Meanwhile, the other pelagic species collected in the survey — striped bass, Longfin Smelt, Sacramento Splittail and thread fin shad — continued their dramatic decline since 1967 when the State Water Project went into effect. Only the American shad shows a less precipitous decline. The graphs in this CDFW memo graphically illustrate how dramatic the declines in fish populations have been over the years: nrm.dfg.ca.gov/...
Entire Delta ecosystem is collapsing
The near-extinction of Delta Smelt in the wild and the collapse of striped bass, Delta smelt, longfin smelt, American shad, splittail and threadfin shad populations documented in the fall survey is part of the larger Pelagic Organism Decline (POD) caused by massive water diversions from the Delta by the state and federal water projects, along with toxics, water pollution, invasive species and other factors.
Between 1967 and 2020, the state’s Fall Midwater Trawl abundance indices for striped bass, Delta smelt, longfin smelt, American shad, splittail and threadfin shad have declined by 99.7, 100, 99.96, 67.9, 100, and 95%, respectively, according to the California Sportfishing Protection Alliance.
Meanwhile, Governor Gavin Newsom is forging ahead with the environmentally destructive Delta Tunnel, Sites Reservoir and Big Ag-backed voluntary agreements, This will only make the ecosystem crash even worse by exporting more water to corporate agribusiness interests south of the Delta.
There is no doubt why Governor Newsom is backing the Delta Tunnel, Sites Reservoir and the voluntary agreements— to serve the wishes of his corporate agribusiness contributors and other Big Money donors.
For example, agribusiness tycoons Stewart and Lynda Resnick, owners of The Wonderful Company and major promoters of the Delta Tunnel and increased water pumping from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, have donated a total of $431,600 to Governor Gavin Newsom since 2018, including $250,000 to Stop The Republican Recall Of Governor Newsom and $64,800 to Newsom For California Governor 2022.
Newsom received a total of $755,198 in donations from agribusiness in the 2018 election cycle, based on the data from www.followthemoney.org. That figure includes a combined $116,800 from Stewart and Lynda Resnick and $58,400 from E.J. Gallo, combined with $579,998 in the agriculture donations category.
Experimental hatchery Delta smelt program continues
Since 2022, the Interagency Ecological Program (IEP), a consortium of nine member agencies, including three State departments and six Federal agencies, has experimentally reintroduced thousands of hatchery-raised Delta smelt from the UC Davis captive breeding facility in Byron back into the estuary, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
“The Delta Smelt Experimental Release Study involves releasing 90,000 laboratory-raised fish into the Delta this season to determine which methods prove the most effective at production, tagging, transport and release of the fish into the wild. Learning which plan works best could someday help to supplement the population with a goal of aiding in the recovery of the species,” the CDFW wrote in their California Outdoors Q&A: wildlife.ca.gov/...
“Recently 32 metal 20-gallon containers were filled with 200 Delta smelt and emptied directly into the Sacramento River into a specially designed submerged cage, the agency stated. The cage provided a safe environment while the fish adjusted to the river temperature and their new surroundings before they were fully released a few hours later into the river,” the agency reported.
Through Delta smelt monitoring surveys that are conducted routinely each year, CDFW said it can learn about their health and survivability.
“Last year was the first time we were able to uniquely mark fish from different experimental release events and get decent numbers of adult fish recaptured in our monitoring surveys,” said CDFW Environmental Program Manager Dr. James Hobbs. “We’re releasing adult fish just before the spawning season, and we’re hoping these fish will meet up and produce the next generations.”
“Unfortunately, the same factors responsible for the near disappearance of the fish are still present including a less than reliable flow of freshwater, low food productivity, loss of wetland habitats, predation by non-native species and other reasons. But scientists say the experiment is showing some positive results with survival and recovery of released adults,” CDFW concluded.
However, if the experiment is showing “showing some positive results” as CDFW claims, why were no Delta smelt, hatchery or wild, found in the FMWT survey at their extensive monitoring stations throughout the estuary in 2023? And why were only 5 smelt collected in the Enhanced Delta Smelt Monitoring (EDSM) survey of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2023?