Rich Simms from the WSC forwarded this my way ... I don't have the attachment yet that has final tallies, but you'll get the gist of a very sad story for one of the Quillayute system's largest spawning tributaries.

RAIN PLEAsE!
I am writing to provide some information about a
> recent fish kill in the
> >NF Calawah River basin. Over the past summer,
> James Starr and myself
> >conducted extensive snorkel/habitat surveys over
> the entire NF Calawah
> >River basin. We focused on counting all salmonids,
> including adults and
> >juveniles.
> >
> >With the drought this year most of the stream has
> gone subsurface leaving
> >behind thousands of dead juvenile salmonids,
> sculpins, and almost a
> >hundred dead adult cutthroat/whitefish. The
> drought is not over and pools
> >are drying by the day so the total numbers of dead
> fish are still
> >increasing. I have provided an attachment that
> briefly describes what we
> >observed, including total numbers of salmonids, and
> estimates of dead fish.
> >
> >There are also a couple points I would like to
> clarify, as I expect many
> >people would have similar questions. One, could
> any of the fish have
> >escaped through migration? We estimated that the
> basin has currently lost
> >29% of the entire salmonid population. Due to the
> drought most of the
> >fish were stranded in disconnected pools and there
> was no opportunity for
> >juvenile/adult fish to outmigrate from the reaches
> that have recently
> >dried. This means that the fish we counted two and
> three weeks ago have
> >not had a chance to go anywhere else, they simply
> died once the water went
> >subsurface.
> >
> >If the weather continues for another week or so, we
> are looking at
> >wholesale losses to the entire lower 15 miles of
> the NF Calawah River. I
> >estimate that all of the surface water (excepting
> the lower .7 miles of
> >the stream which are still flowing) will go
> subterranean and that we may
> >lose as much as 80% of all coastal cutthroat and
> 65-80% of all salmonids
> >currently inhabiting the river. To make matters
> worse the NF Calawah only
> >has a few small tributaries, and those tributaries
> (excepting Pistol Creek
> >which only has a short anadromous reach) are also
> dry so there are not any
> >places for the fish to seek refugia.
> >
> >Please read over the attachment and feel free to
> contact me with any
> >questions or requests. There is simply too much
> information to put onto
> >paper right now but I hope this brief writeup helps
> people understand how
> >severely our juvenile salmonids have been impacted
> during this summer/fall
> >drought.
> >
> >My last trip up the NF two days ago left me with a
> pit in my stomach, the
> >stench from piles of sculpins, hundreds of them,
> and rotting matts of
> >juvenile salmonids by the thousands. The birds are
> doing well and recent
> >conversations with other scientists make me wonder
> about the nutrient
> >cycling of these dead creatures and the
> recolonization of the stream this
> >winter. In addition all of the caddis and mayflies
> that are hatching do
> >not have any water in which to lay their eggs so
> that is something else to
> >consider. I also thought of hyporheic migration
> for the juvenile fish,
> >but after digging down up to three feet in the
> river channel there was no
> >water in sight so the streambed is dry in the upper
> most substrate.
> >
> >I wish you all the best.
> >
> >Sincerely,
> >John McMillan
> >Salmonid Ecologist
> >Wild Salmon Center