Should dams in the lower Snake River be breached to give Northwest salmon a better shot at thriving?
Is the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' practice of carrying fish around dams as they head toward the Pacific Ocean helping them survive?
A small Boise company that quietly has been designing and deploying fish-detection systems for nearly two decades is helping answer those questions.
Biomark Inc., with about 20 employees, is busy creating systems to account for fish as they migrate. The company, at 703 Americana Blvd., also implants fish with half-inch chips that transmit data when they come within range of antennas the company installs in streams or hatcheries.
Biomark's work is helping keep track of salmon as they make their way down the Columbia River basin and back. The data help researchers understand the fish survival rate.
Government experts say Biomark's products work well and provide accurate information. The company's products are in hundreds of locations throughout the Pacific Northwest.
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