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The endangered fish benefited from last year's wet winter, but the hitch needs more rainfall-and more support from water agencies and political leaders-to create a sustained comeback.
JANUARY 30, 2024
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One year after California state and Lake County leaders declared an emergency for the endangered Clear Lake Hitch (known as "chi" to local Pomo Tribes), more than a dozen agencies are collaborating in an all-hands-on-deck approach to save this culturally important fish, one intertwined with our destiny as Tribal peoples.
For millennia, abundant spring spawning runs of chi filled 14 tributaries feeding North America's most ancient lake. Thousands of Tribal members gathered at Clear Lake to communally hand-harvest and process chi into fish jerky that provided year-long sustenance. Following successive genocides of Tribal communities, countless generations of sustainable fish harvests were erased by five generations of environmental damage: water diversions, invasive species introductions, and habitat destruction. Within our lifetimes, the chi spawning runs diminished to only six streams, and throughout the recent drought, we didn't witness a single run.
In 2022, fearing for the chi's future, Tribal...




