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<br />Dolores River <br /> <br />The headwaters of the Dolores River are in the San Juan Mountains and it flows <br /> <br />mostly northward about 200 miles to its confluence with the Colorado River in Utah. McPhee <br /> <br /> <br />dam, which stores water primarily for irrigation, regulates flow for most of its course. <br /> <br /> <br />McPhee dam has a capacity of381,000 acre feet and began storing water in 1984. The San <br /> <br /> <br />Miguel River is of comparable size and joins the Dolores about 117 miles below McPhee <br /> <br />reservoir and has a relatively unregulated flow. <br /> <br />Access points for boat launches and take-outs were found to be very limited over most <br /> <br /> <br />of the river. A suitable site was found in the Big Gypsum Yaney, which is 14 miles down <br /> <br /> <br />river from the Slick Rock Bridge and 34 river miles upstream ofthe Bedrock boat launch. <br /> <br /> <br />The Dolores River guide (DeVries and Maurer 1977) starts with River Mile (RM) 0.0 at the <br /> <br /> <br />Bradfield Bridge and the confluence of the Dolores with the Colorado River is RM 171. This <br /> <br /> <br />study used the river guide in reverse RM order to identify landmarks. Beginning at the <br /> <br /> <br />confluence as River Mile 0.0, the Utah-Colorado State line is RM 22.4, and the Big Gypsum <br /> <br /> <br />Study Site is RM 108.2 to 109.9. The study site starts at the BLM Gypsum Yaney <br /> <br /> <br />Recreation site and ends about 1.6 miles downstream at the 20R (county road) bridge <br /> <br /> <br />crossing. The study station is about 70 river miles downstream of McPhee Reservoir. A site <br /> <br />map and a summary of flows will be presented in the next progress report. <br /> <br />MEmODS <br /> <br />Fish Samoles <br /> <br />'-~ <br /> <br />Fish were electro-shocked and netted from an Achines raft using a Smith-Root electro- <br /> <br />fisher powered by a 5000-watt generator with the anode mounted on a forward boom. The <br /> <br />boat was maneuvered by either oars or by a battery powered 40 pound troning motor. Two <br /> <br />10 <br /> <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />