汤姆视频 photo by Eric Engman.
Dakota Keller wades through the water while taking depth measurements, checking fish
traps and recording bank levels in Cripple Creek on June 13, 2024.
By Amy Loeffler
Clad in waders, Dakota Keller, a graduate student with the UAF Department of Biology and Wildlife, slips into waist-high creek water.
It鈥檚 early June, and she鈥檚 looking for a temperature logger that she and her research partner, high school student Lily Ann Reece, placed in Cripple Creek earlier in the week. Once retrieved, the device will offer a better picture of water temperature fluctuations.
That data is just one puzzle piece among many that the pair are compiling over the summer to flesh out how the waterway could better sustain wildlife as the habitat is restored there.
The access point for the creek is just west of the Tesoro gas station at the intersection of Chena Ridge and Chena Pump roads, close to a dense residential area in western Fairbanks. But to reach their research site, Keller and Reece navigate thick stands of spruce, traverse spongy ground laden with moose poop and combat the onslaught of summer mosquitoes. At the water鈥檚 edge, there is also mud the consistency of Ben and Jerry鈥檚 New York Super Fudge Chunk enveloping their Xtratuf rubber boots in a gooey stranglehold.
Their work is to meticulously track water chemistry, fish populations and insects 鈥 barometers for the health of the stream. These efforts aid a more ambitious goal: to remake the creek into habitat for numerous species of fish, bugs and other wildlife, perhaps even rearing grounds for juvenile salmon.
A drain-damaged creek
Eighty-nine years ago, a drainage project for a gold-mining dredge upstream near Ester bypassed Cripple Creek, shunting its water into a straight ditch that didn鈥檛 foster use by fish, according to Jeff Muehlbauer, an assistant professor of fisheries and ecology at UAF.
The dredge shut down in 1964, but the drain remained.
鈥淭he drain is incised, it has this canyon aspect to it and so it鈥檚 narrow and deep, and the water just really rips right through there, and that doesn鈥檛 provide any habitat for salmon,鈥 said Muehlbauer, who leads the U.S. Geological Survey鈥檚 Alaska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit through the UAF Institute of Arctic Biology.
However, restoration efforts during the past decade have now returned water to Cripple Creek鈥檚 original, meandering channel, he said.
鈥溙滥肥悠 water that鈥檚 moving a little more slowly, deposition is happening,鈥 he said. 鈥溙滥肥悠 hopefully food for salmon and also habitat for them to hide in.鈥
Hoping to help salmon
Researchers hope to gather data about the newly restored creek鈥檚 ability to protect numerous fish species. Chinook, or king, salmon are of special interest. The fish, known for their fatty and buttery flesh, have recently suffered declines so severe that even subsistence harvests were closed in many parts of the state in 2024.
The Chena River is the second-largest producer of Chinook in the U.S. portion of the Yukon River drainage, which makes restoration of Cripple Creek a potentially important contributor to the health of the overall population.
Cripple Creek flows into the lower Chena River near The Pump House, a restaurant built inside the original facility that drew water from the river to supply the dredging operation in Ester.
The creek offers the last opportunity for salmon born in the upper Chena River watershed to seek refuge in the aqueous nurseries of a small tributary before they head for the Bering Sea. Muehlbauer said the Tanana and Yukon rivers downstream of the Chena are big, tumultuous and turbid.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a totally different world for a fish,鈥 he said.
While Chinook are among the most charismatic and newsworthy of the fish that could use Cripple Creek, a healthy waterway would also help other species, including grayling, longnose sucker and burbot, which are popular as ice-fishing catch.
Back at the traps, Keller and Reece find a sucker, which is measured and sent on its way to continue meandering through the silt-laden water.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really fun to find fish,鈥 said Reece, a Hutchison High School rising senior who received the American Fisheries Society鈥檚 Hutton . 鈥淎t the start of the season when there weren鈥檛 any, it was sort of a bummer, but now it鈥檚 something to look forward to when we check traps.鈥
A community effort
Keller, the UAF graduate student, said research at Cripple Creek isn鈥檛 just yielding data; it鈥檚 also galvanizing community support.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e right next to elementary school, you're right next to UAF,鈥 she said. 鈥淓ven though it鈥檚 an urban stream, you鈥檝e got a lot of opportunities to engage the public with this project and raise awareness of how stream restoration can provide community connection.鈥
Numerous partnerships have advanced the habitat restoration work.
Christi Buffington serves dual roles on the project as a staff education and research scientist at the UAF International Arctic Research Center. She co-leads citizen science projects through an international science and education program called Global Learning and Observations to Benefit the Environment.
鈥淧eople working here in Fairbanks 鈥 the Tanana Valley Watershed Association, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Interior Alaska Land Trust and other partners 鈥 looked at a watershed restoration action plan and asked, 鈥榃here do we need salmon restoration?鈥欌 she said. 鈥淚n the whole Yukon River watershed, Chena is number two. Well, if you鈥檙e putting in a culvert, Cripple Creek is an obvious choice.鈥
From 2017 to 2020, the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities replaced the culverts that allow Cripple Creek water to pass under the several roads that access neighborhoods on Chena Ridge. Advocacy from the Interior Alaska Land Trust and other entities led to culvert reconfigurations and a streamflow redirection that restored water to the old meandering creek channel. Under one road, the new culverts even have squiggly passages made just for salmon.
In addition to meandering channels, young salmon like shade. Last September, in an effort to provide shelter from the sun for future juvenile salmon and other fish species, Buffington鈥檚 students planted 130 birch seedlings at the confluence of Cripple and Happy creeks; all were grown in her neighbor's bathtub.
Owen Guthrie, president of the Interior Alaska Land Trust and the vice chancellor of student affairs and enrollment management at UAF, said the project has been an important community-building effort.
The land trust is developing a 90-acre parcel, which contains the confluence of the historic channel and the drain, into the Chinook Conservation Park. It features a trail for residents of the neighborhood to explore.
鈥淐ripple Creek has deep roots in the community, and it鈥檚 an obvious opportunity for the university,鈥 Guthrie said. 鈥淭hat redirect [of the channel] is on university property, which was given as part of its original land grant in the 1920s. It just makes so much sense to get students involved.鈥
And while researchers are watching Chinook salmon intensively at Cripple Creek, 鈥渋t鈥檚 not about the granularity of one species,鈥 Guthrie said. 鈥淭his is a whole ecosystem approach.鈥