The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Spey anglers reel in funds to aid stocks of young fish

Salmon: Climate change measures

- BY DAVID MACKAY

Efforts to improve dwindling fish stocks on the River Spey have received a funding boost to protect species from climate change.

Catches on the water hit an all-time low during 2018 when just 3,178 salmon were reeled in by anglers.

The total leaped back to 5,090 last year but concerns persist about a long-term decline on the river and the rest of Scotland – with fears that without action the Atlantic salmon could become extinct.

Now the Spey Catchment Initiative has received a £192,000 grant from Scottish Natural Heritage to nurture young fish.

The project on the River Calder, which is one of the Spey’s upper tributarie­s, near Newtonmore, will fund extensive tree planting to provide shade to cool the water.

Investigat­ions have already been carried out in the area with local estates to create wooden structures to provide sanctuary for young fish, as well as helping to slow the fast-flowing river, which it is hoped will also provide some flood protection in the area.

Roger Knight, director of the Spey Fishery Board, believes the changes will provide long-term benefits for several wildlife species.

He said: “Often we can only tackle parts of a river, or problems at specific locations, but this grant will enable the Spey Catchment Initiative to tackle the River Calder catchment at a landscape scale. It will be the biggest project so far for the initiative, benefiting not just the fish population­s there, but the ecology and biodiversi­ty of the wider environmen­t while also providing some flood risk alleviatio­n benefits for the Spey catchment down below.”

It is hoped that work will be able to begin on the projects next month.

Angling on the River Spey is estimated to generate about £15 million per year for communitie­s that line its route, while sustaining 350 jobs.

However, it is feared that if catches continue to follow a long-term declining trend then visitors may choose to stop returning.

Penny Lawson, the Spey Catchment Initiative’s project officer, said: “Anything that can be done to improve the young salmon population there is positive, but this project will bring long-term benefits to many other species too and help futureproo­f the area against the onset of climate change.

“It will be a significan­t enhancemen­t for biodiversi­ty and the wider environmen­t and is particular­ly good news in these otherwise troubled times.”

 ?? Photograph by Jason Hedges ?? WAITING GAME: Anglers on the Spey fear a long-term decline in Atlantic salmon.
Photograph by Jason Hedges WAITING GAME: Anglers on the Spey fear a long-term decline in Atlantic salmon.

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