A tanker trunk backed confidently down a boat ramp at Boyd’s Landing in Yolo County, looking as if it were about to dump a load of fuel into the briskly flowing Feather River. But as the driver flipped a metal lever on the back of the tank, the stream flowing into the river was instead a torrent of water flecked with the gyrating bodies of hundreds of thousands of chinook salmon smolts.
This release of salmon, reared from eggs in the nearby Feather River Fish Hatchery, represents a future investment in the state’s salmon population — even as the current ocean population of chinook is so depleted from drought
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