Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

SURVIVAL WORKOUT

Endangered fish swim against the current

- By HENRY BREAN

Behind the locked gate of a government hatchery near Lake Mead, silvery fish swim against a man-made current in a shallow tank resembling a racetrack.

For two critically endangered species that once flourished in the Colorado River, the race for survival now involves a trip to the gym.

“The fish in here are kind of couch potatoes,” said Brandon Senger, motioning to the hatchery’s indoor tanks filled with razorback suckers.

Senger is the supervisin­g fisheries biologist for the Department of Wildlife in Las Vegas. “It started with trout back in the ’70s to try to improve post-stocking survival rates,” Senger said.

FISH DOING FISH THINGS

The razorbacks and bonytails get their exercise in a long tank filled with about two feet of water and equipped with pumps arranged to produce a constant flow with no dead spots. A cinder-block barrier runs down the middle of the tank to form what amounts to a treadmill for fish — an oval track around which the water constantly swirls.

The training tank was set up and stocked with bonytails for the first time a few weeks ago. Already the effort appears to be producing results.

Though the strength-trained fish look about the same as their lazier hatchery mates, Senger said you can feel the difference when you handle them. “They’re a lot more wily and stronger,” he said.

The fish will spend their last 30 days in captivity undergoing strength training in gradually increasing flows. Then they will be turned loose next month to see how they fare against the non-native game fish and other predators that have pushed their species to the brink of extinction.

DOOMED BY DAMS?

The bonytail chub and razorback sucker used to be found throughout the Colorado River system, where they grew at least 2 feet long and lived for decades in swift currents of murky, silt-laden water. Then the dams went up and the suddenly clear, still reservoirs behind them were stocked with game fish.

As hatchery biologist Eric Laux put it: “Suddenly they can’t go where they used to go, and they have all these crazy neighbors.”

With no time to adapt, their numbers quickly plummeted.

The bonytail was added to the endangered species list in 1980, and the razorback joined it there in 1991.

Laux said the bonytail is considered “functional­ly extinct” because all the fish now found in the wild were put there by people. The silvery fish with the streamline­d body doesn’t live long enough to reproduce on its own.

That might sound futile, but researcher­s insist they are learning from their failures. “

STRENGTH IN NUMBERS

Each year, thousands of newly hatched razorbacks, each less than half an inch long, are collected from Lake Mohave and elsewhere to be raised off-river for at least two years. Most of them are gobbled up by predators soon after their release, but some have been known to survive for 20 years or more. There are even a few isolated groups that reproduce in the wild, including a small, selfsustai­ning population in Lake Mead.

“That’s why we try to make them big. Bigger fish survive longer,” Senger said.

Every fish that is raised and released gets implanted with a pit tag similar to the microchips people place in their pet dogs. Researcher­s track their subjects in the wild using underwater scanning mats that log the tagged fish as they swim overhead.

Twice a year, fish are netted and examined in various locations to assess the relative size and condition of the population.

Senger said those regular roundups should give researcher­s their first clues as to whether the strength training is making a difference, but it could be years before their experiment in survival of the fittest yields any meaningful results.

“Ideally, we will catch these fish again,” he said.

 ?? BRETT LE BLANC/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL @BLEBLANCPH­OTO ?? Julia Mueller, right, fishery biologist for the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, and Lisa Osborn, left, Nevada Department of Wildlife Lake Mohave biologist, take measuremen­ts from a razorback sucker fish during a collection March 16 on Lake Mohave.
BRETT LE BLANC/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL @BLEBLANCPH­OTO Julia Mueller, right, fishery biologist for the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, and Lisa Osborn, left, Nevada Department of Wildlife Lake Mohave biologist, take measuremen­ts from a razorback sucker fish during a collection March 16 on Lake Mohave.
 ??  ?? Nevada Department of Wildlife Hatchery biologist Eric Laux adds salt March 17 to a tank of newlydeliv­ered razorback suckers, which used to be found throughout the Colorado River system.
Nevada Department of Wildlife Hatchery biologist Eric Laux adds salt March 17 to a tank of newlydeliv­ered razorback suckers, which used to be found throughout the Colorado River system.
 ??  ?? Nevada Department of Wildlife hatchery technician Chris Burg moves recently delivered razorback suckers at the Lake Mead hatchery.
Nevada Department of Wildlife hatchery technician Chris Burg moves recently delivered razorback suckers at the Lake Mead hatchery.
 ?? BRETT LE BLANC/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL @BLEBLANCPH­OTO ?? Workers collect razorback suckers March 16 from Lake Mohave.
BRETT LE BLANC/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL @BLEBLANCPH­OTO Workers collect razorback suckers March 16 from Lake Mohave.
 ??  ?? Julia Mueller, 28, fishery biologist for the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, stores a razorback sucker after untangling it from a net on Lake Mohave.
Julia Mueller, 28, fishery biologist for the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, stores a razorback sucker after untangling it from a net on Lake Mohave.

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