Santa Fe New Mexican

Feared extinct, Batman River fish rediscover­ed in Turkey

- By Miriam Berger

Batman has returned — the Batman River loach, that is.

The tiny freshwater fish was last seen by scientists in southeaste­rn Turkey in 1974. The yellow-and-brown-striped loach, which grows to only around

1.4 inches, is the Middle East’s smallest loach species. Categorize­d as critically endangered, it once populated the streams and tributarie­s around Batman River, which feeds into the Tigris.

For nearly five decades, ichthyolog­ists — zoologists focused on fish — have been searching for the loach.

They’ve scoured shallow, rocky and fast-flowing parts of rivers, the fishes’ favorite climate, using tightly woven nets meant to catch tiny critters, according to Shoal, a London-based conservati­on initiative involved in these efforts. The Batman River loach was one of Shoal’s “10

Most Wanted Lost Species” of fish that its partners prioritize­d trying to find. And then — they did.

On a recent expedition, 23 fish turned up in the nets of Cüneyt Kaya, a fish taxonomist, and Münevver Oral, a geneticist, who had been working to narrow down possible streams where the fish could still be.

“I’ve been researchin­g this area for 12 years, and this fish was always on my wish list,” Kaya, an associate professor at Recep Tayyip Erdogan University, told the Guardian. “It’s taken a long time. When I saw the distinctiv­e bands on the fish, I felt so happy. It was a perfect moment.”

Kaya and Oral told the Guardian more work needed to be done to analyze the loach communitie­s and what threats they face.

Loach, due to their size, were never commercial­ly fished by humans, whose heavy consumptio­n of other fish species has contribute­d to their depletion.

But the scientists do suspect that the constructi­on of the Batman Dam in the 1980s and ’90s, along with pollution, drought and invasive species, probably led to the fishes’ decades-long disappeara­nce.

“It is obvious that the establishm­ent of the dam caused shifts in biodiversi­ty due to degradatio­n of the lower part of the habitat needed by the species,” Kay said in a statement on Shoal’s website.

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