Otago Daily Times

Trout removed to protect galaxiid species

- HAMISH MACLEAN hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

THERE will be fewer fish to fry but more of two native species left alive.

More than 500 rainbow and brown trout have been removed from a Mackenzie Basin stream to protect two types of nonmigrato­ry galaxiids.

Environmen­t Canterbury biodiversi­ty officer Robert CarsonIles said he would return to Fork Stream, west of Lake Tekapo and running south of the Gamack Range, this week to continue what was an interagenc­y effort.

In April, a team from ECan, Doc and the New Zealand Defence Force worked together to remove large numbers of the freshwater game fish from the area — but as the numbers had lowered over the past couple of years the numbers of fish removed each visit decreased.

‘‘You’re repeatedly going in before you get them all,’’ Mr CarsonIles said.

‘‘We’re getting down into the real nitty gritty there. So, we’re only pulling out a handful of a fish each time.’’

Another ‘‘big team hit’’ was likely this summer.

The removed trout were stunned then handnetted and transporte­d downstream of one of two fish barriers, prefabrica­ted concrete droplog weirs, one on site at the NZDF military camp, and the other on Glenmore Station.

It was likely there were only 20 trout upstream of the barrier on the defence force land, in place for about two and ahalf years, a year longer than the Glenmore Station barrier.

The bignose and longjaw galaxiids, which are being protected from the predatory, introduced trout, are only found in the Mackenzie Basin.

The Doc website states there are 12 species of nonmigrato­ry galaxiids and a further 13 indetermin­ate galaxiid species recognised in New Zealand.

‘‘These fish are not well known, and it is difficult to tell nonmigrato­ry galaxiids species apart. Some species are only found in one or two rivers and all have a threatened or atrisk conservati­on status.’’

 ?? PHOTOS: SUPPLIED ?? Gone fishing . . . A team from Environmen­t Canterbury, the Department of Conservati­on and the New Zealand Defence Force work together to net trout and move them further downstream, away from bignose and longjaw galaxiids, which are only found in the Mackenzie Basin.
PHOTOS: SUPPLIED Gone fishing . . . A team from Environmen­t Canterbury, the Department of Conservati­on and the New Zealand Defence Force work together to net trout and move them further downstream, away from bignose and longjaw galaxiids, which are only found in the Mackenzie Basin.
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