Record Details

Impact of artificial flooding on farm profits and streamflow in Echo Meadows, Oregon

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Impact of artificial flooding on farm profits and streamflow in Echo Meadows, Oregon
Names Seely, Harold E (creator)
Adams, Richard M. (advisor)
Date Issued 1997-08-06 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1998
Abstract Competition for water both from within the irrigation community and from
outside interests has been a major source of conflict in the West. In the Umatilla Basin of
central Oregon, Umatilla River water is diverted to irrigate a variety of crops, while
instream flows have value in salmonid production. Historically, the Umatilla Basin
supported runs of fall and spring Chinook as well as steelhead and resident trout but
native fish populations have largely disappeared from the river system. The decline in
salmonid production has been blamed, in part, on a combination of low streamflow and
high water temperatures in the summer months resulting from diversions by agricultural
users.
This thesis examines a proposed project designed to increase streamflow in the
lower Umatilla River during the summer months by artificially flooding selected
agricultural land in the Echo Meadows area of the basin during the late winter. The thesis
also examines alternative options to increase streamflow. Estimates of the economic and
hydrologic impacts of winter water spreading and other options provides information to
policy-makers and irrigators on the costs and benefits associated with various project
management alternatives.
Using information on agricultural production and water supply in the lower
Umatilla Basin, this thesis constructs a mathematical optimization model of
representative farms in the area. In addition, because return flows represent an important
component of streamflow in summer months, water applications determined by the
representative farm models are used to assess the impacts of the artificial flooding project
on streamflow in the Umatilla River below the study area.
The results of the representative farm models indicate that the artificial flooding
project increases farm profits by $37,620 and streamflow by 18.58 cubic feet per second.
Alternative techniques to obtain similar increases in streamflow are more costly and
would have negative effects on the agricultural community.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Floods -- Oregon -- Echo Meadows -- Econometric models
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/19115

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