Sweet swell of summer: 'Streams are full ... lake is full'Houseboats sit in a near full Lake Shasta at Holiday Harbor (Redding Record Searchlight - 05/10/2010) 
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Chico Enterprise-Record - 05/17/2010
Sacramento Bee - 05/17/2010
Marysville Appeal-Democrat - 03/18/2010
Sacramento Bee - 02/01/2010
Fresno Bee - 11/24/2009

First fall-run chinook salmon fishing since '07 expected to be OK'dWhen salmon return from the ocean this fall for their age-old spawning drama, American River anglers may well get their first chance in three years to welcome them back. That hook-and-line connection between man and fish has been banned since 2007 to protect the fall-run chinook salmon amid an unprecedented population decline. While the causes of the decline remain unclear, the ban apparently helped. This year's run is projected to surge back, and on Wednesday the California Fish and Game Commission is expected to approve limited salmon fishing again in the American, Feather and Sacramento rivers. (Sacramento Bee - 04/20/2010) 
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Marysville Appeal-Democrat - 05/17/2010
Sacramento Bee - 05/11/2010
New York Times - 03/22/2010
Fresno Bee - 02/02/2010
Contra Costa Times - 11/21/2009

Science panel says Delta pumping restrictions are justified in CaliforniaWater restrictions need more study, report says A high-level science panel Friday concluded that federal rules that limit water diversions from the Delta to protect endangered fish are "scientifically justified," dealing a blow to south state water interests that had hoped the review would punch holes in the rules. (Sacramento Bee - 03/22/2010) 
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Chico Enterprise-Record - 02/04/2010
Marysville Appeal-Democrat - 02/03/2010
Chico Enterprise-Record - 02/03/2010
Chico Enterprise-Record - 02/02/2010
Grass Valley Union - 02/01/2010

Legal action could stall Natomas levee repairsCrews remove trees from an area that will expand the levee as part of the Natomas Levee improvement project. Levee repairs in Sacramento's Natomas Basin face new legal and financial threats that could delay construction of the massive project. The Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency is just weeks from awarding a $90 million construction contract for a key phase of the project. But that work depends on state matching funds, which have been bottled up by the state budget crisis. (Sacramento Bee - 03/09/2009) 
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Marysville Appeal-Democrat - 02/02/2010
Sacramento Bee - 02/01/2010
Marysville Appeal-Democrat - 11/19/2009
Woodland Daily Democrat - 11/19/2009
Sacramento Business Journal - 07/30/2009

Boaters, beware: Hunt is on for mussel invaders Authorities are on the lookout for quagga and zebra mussels, invasive species known to hitchhike from one body of water to another by attaching themselves to boat trailers, hulls, engines and steering components. (Sacramento Bee - 07/03/2008) 
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Ukiah Daily Journal - 02/02/2010
Sacramento Bee - 03/26/2009
Dept. of Fish and Game - 10/16/2008
Las Vegas Sun - 06/20/2008
Calif. Department of Water Resources - 05/23/2008

Redding Record Searchlight - 06/11/2009
Sacramento Bee - 03/24/2009
California Aggie - 10/15/2008
Yubanet.com - 05/23/2008
Sacramento Channel 7 - 05/14/2008

Sacramento Bee - 03/27/2008

Mining companies agree to pay $3 million for Lava Cap Mine cleanup The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California approved a $3 million settlement today between the U.S. Department of Justice, on behalf of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the California Department of Toxic Substances Control, and settling defendants Newmont Capital Limited and Newmont Mining Corporation of Canada Limited to resolve liability at the Lava Cap Mine Superfund Site in Nevada County, Calif. (YubaNet.com - 02/25/2009) 
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San Jose Mercury News - 05/17/2010
Chico Enterprise-Record - 05/10/2010
Sacramento Bee - 03/22/2010
Redding Record Searchlight - 02/01/2010
Business Journal - 02/01/2010

Yolo Bypass sees flood of wildlife activityThere's a whole unique food web that happens out in the floodplain. The Yolo Bypass is a migratory interchange for man and beast. That's especially so in a flood. "There's a whole unique food web that happens out in the floodplain," said Ted Sommer, a fisheries biologist and program manager at the Calif. Dept. of Water Resources. The flood triggered a bloom of tiny plants, called phytoplankton, which are food for tiny aquatic animals called zooplankton. These, in turn, create a rich buffet for fish. (Sacramento Bee - 02/04/2010) 
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Inland Valley Daily Bulletin - 05/17/2010
Contra Costa Times - 05/11/2010
Sacramento Bee - 03/22/2010
Sacramento Bee - 03/22/2010
Redding Record Searchlight - 03/18/2010

Yolo Bypass sees flood of wildlife activityThere's a whole unique food web that happens out in the floodplain. The Yolo Bypass is a migratory interchange for man and beast. That's especially so in a flood. "There's a whole unique food web that happens out in the floodplain," said Ted Sommer, a fisheries biologist and program manager at the Calif. Dept. of Water Resources. The flood triggered a bloom of tiny plants, called phytoplankton, which are food for tiny aquatic animals called zooplankton. These, in turn, create a rich buffet for fish. (Sacramento Bee - 02/04/2010) 
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