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Colorado rivers. According to a 1978 U.S. Bureau of to obtain live specimens from lakes Mohave and Havasu <br />Land Management report on salinity problems in the <br />Colorado River, irrigated agricultural lands in the <br />Grand Valley region of Colorado return 8 tons of salts <br />to the Colorado River for each acre under irrigation. <br />Overgrazed rangelands in the basin, characterized by <br />greatly accelerated erosion and high salt content, <br />can contribute up to 30 tons of salts to the rivers <br />per acre of watershed. Salinity concentrations have <br />doubled and tripled in some sections of the Colorado <br />River in comparison to virgin flow conditions. Such <br />changes in the flows and water quality exert influ- <br />ences downstream on channel structure and fish <br />habitat. The loss of great numbers of bonytail <br />chubs from the areas inhabited by squawfish must have <br />severely depleted the potential food supply of squaw- <br />fish, and may be a major cause of the reduced growth <br />rates of squawfish in recent times. <br />Prospects for the Future <br />Realistically, the prospects for restoring the <br />abundance of bonytail chubs to a semblance of their <br />former numbers in any part of the original range must <br />be viewed as dim. This species is now the rarest of <br />the native fishes and the species in most imminent <br />danger of extinction. Biologists have been attempting <br />to hold in a hatchery for artificial propagation. <br />Captive propagation may prove to be the only way this <br />species can be maintained. Unless the factors caus- <br />ing the elimination of bonytail chubs are understood, <br />and some action is taken to modify or eliminate these <br />factors, the restoration of the bonytail chub in its <br />historic range cannot be expected from stocking hat- <br />chery reared fish. Even if the factors causing <br />elimination from a river section became clearly under- <br />stood, it is not likely that remedial action would be <br />possible. For example, the dismantling of Flaming <br />Gorge Dam to restore the original flow and tempera- <br />ture regime of the Green River must be considered <br />beyond the realm of possibility. <br />If bonytail chubs occur in an area, it is likely <br />that an occasional specimen would be caught by fish- <br />ermen fishing for catfish. If fishermen become <br />familiar with the appearance of bonytail chubs, and <br />if a specimen believed to be of this species is <br />caught, it should be photographed before release and <br />reported to the Colorado Division of Wildlife. There <br />have been no verified records of the bonytail chub <br />in Colorado for many years. The discovery of a <br />population would be a significant event. <br />21