INTRODUCTION

Previous

This report concerns the ability of fish-populations in the Neosho and Marais des Cygnes rivers in Kansas to readjust to continuous stream-flow following intermittent conditions resulting from the severest drought in the history of the State.

The variable weather in Kansas (and in other areas of the Great Plains) markedly affects its flora and fauna. Weaver and Albertson (1936) reported as much as 91 per cent loss in the basal prairie vegetative cover in Kansas near the close of the drought of the 1930's. The average annual cost (in 1951 prices) of floods in Kansas from 1926 to 1953 was $35,000,000. In the same period the average annual loss from the droughts of the 1930's and 1950's was $75,000,000 (in 1951 prices), excluding losses from wind- and soil-erosion. Thus, over a period of 28 years, the average annual flood-losses were less than one-half the average annual drought-losses (Foley, Smrha, and Metzler, 1955:9; Anonymous, 1958:15).

Weather conditions in Kansas from 1951 to 1957 were especially noteworthy: 1951 produced a bumper crop of climatological events significant to the economy of the State. Notable among these were: Wettest year since beginning of the state-wide weather records in 1887; highest river stages since settlement of the State on the Kansas River and on most of its tributaries, as well as on the Marais des Cygnes and on the Neosho and Cottonwood. The upper Arkansas and a number of smaller streams in western Kansas also experienced unprecedented flooding (Garrett, 1951:147). This period of damaging floods was immediately followed by the driest five-year period on record, culminating in the driest year in 1956 (Garrett, 1958:56). Water shortage became serious for many communities. The Neosho River usually furnishes adequate quantities of water for present demands, but in some years of drought all flow ceases for several consecutive months. In 1956-'57, the city of Chanute, on an emergency basis, recirculated treated sewage for potable supply (Metzler et al., 1958). The water shortage in many communities along the Neosho River became so serious that a joint project to pump water from the Smoky Hill River into the upper Neosho was considered, and preliminary investigations were made. If the drought had continued through 1957, this program might have been vigorously promoted. Data on stream-flow in the Neosho and Marais des Cygnes (1951-'59) are presented in Tables 1-4.

These severe conditions provided a unique opportunity to gain insight into the ability of several species of fish to adjust to marked changes in their environment. For this reason, and because of a paucity of information concerning stream-fish populations in Kansas, the study here reported on was undertaken.

Table 1. Stream-flow in Cubic Feet per Second, Neosho River near Council Grove, Kansas. Drainage Area: 250 Square Miles

Water-year[A] Average flow Maximum Minimum
1951 498.0 121,000 3.0
1952 82.1 4,850 .7
1953 5.37 202 .1
1954 8.53 2,720 .1
1955 31.2 6,480 0
1956 10.1 5,250 0
1957 68.5 12,300 0
1958 131.0 5,360 .8
1959 114.0 7,250 8.5

Table 2. Stream-flow in Cubic Feet per Second, Neosho River near Parsons, Kansas. Drainage Area: 4905 Square Miles.

Water-year[B] Average flow Maximum Minimum
1951 8,290 410,000 124.0
1952 2,021 20,500 20.0
1953 173 4,110 .3
1954 430 27,900 .1
1955 645 18,600 0
1956 180 6,170 0
1957 1,774 25,000 0
1958 3,092 27,200 78.0
1959 1,609 22,600 139.0

Table 3. Stream-flow in Cubic Feet per Second, Marais des Cygnes River Near Ottawa, Kansas. Drainage Area: 1,250 Square Miles.

Water-year Average flow Maximum Minimum
1951 2,113 142,000 25.0
1952 542 12,000 .2
1953 36.5 2,690 .2
1954 73.6 5,660 .5
1955 75.7 5,240 .7
1956 26 1,590 .7
1957 442 11,200 .7
1958 775 9,130 5.6

Table 4. Stream-flow in Cubic Feet per Second, Marais des Cygnes River at Trading Post, Kansas. Drainage Area: 2,880 Square Miles.

Water-year Average flow Maximum Minimum
1951 5,489 148,000 36.0
1952 1,750 20,400 3.0
1953 261 7,590 0
1954 334 12,500 0
1955 786 16,100 .2
1956 202 10,000 0
1957 871 14,700 0
1958 2,453 20,400 120.0
[C]1959 750 10,900 3.4

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Clyx.com


Top of Page
Top of Page