Texarkana Gazette

BIOLOGISTS TRY TO SAVE ANCIENT FISH AS COLORADO RIVER FADES

- By Brittany Peterson ■ The Associated Press

PAGE, Ariz. — Barrett Friesen steers a motorboat toward the shore of Lake Powell, with the Glen Canyon Dam towering overhead. Pale “bathtub rings” line the canyon’s rocky face, starkly illustrati­ng how water levels have slumped in the second-largest U.S. reservoir amid rising demand and a multi-year drought.

The Utah State University graduate student and colleagues are on a mission to save the humpback chub, an ancient fish under assault from nonnative predators in the Colorado River. The reservoir’s decline may soon make things worse, enabling these introduced fish to get past the dam to where the biggest groups of chub remain, farther downstream in the Grand Canyon.

On the brink of extinction decades ago, the chub has come back in modest numbers thanks to fish biologists and other scientists and engineers. But an emerging threat becomes evident in early June as Friesen hauls up minnow traps and gillnets packed with carp, gizzard shad, green sunfish and, ominously, three smallmouth bass.

“Public enemy number one,” he says as lab technician Justin Furby weighs one on a handheld scale.

Smallmouth bass feast on humpback chub in the river’s upper section. Agencies spend millions of dollars there annually to keep those intruders in check. The native fish have been safer below Glen Canyon Dam because it blocks the path to the Lower

Colorado and the Grand Canyon, some 200 miles downstream — but that may not be true for long.

Bass up in Lake Powell generally prefer warmer waters in shallow areas and at the surface. As reservoir levels drop, they are edging closer to the dam and its penstocks

— submerged steel tubes that carry water to turbines, where it generates hydroelect­ric power and is released on the other side.

If large numbers of bass and other predator fish are sucked into the penstocks, survive and reproduce below the dam, they’ll have an open lane to attack chub and other natives, potentiall­y unraveling years of restoratio­n work and upending the Grand

Canyon aquatic ecosystem.

That stretch of river is the only place native fish still dominate the system, said

Brian Healy, fisheries biologist for Grand

Canyon National Park. “(It) is very unique and we want to keep it that way,” he said.

The dam’s completion in 1963 was a primary reason the chub nearly died out in the river they had inhabited for millions of years. The concrete barrier disrupted water flow, temperatur­es and sediments where the fish spawned. The chub is resilient but hasn’t evolved to withstand sudden introducti­on of predatory sport fish.

Although biological­ly a minnow, the humpback chub can reach 20 inches and 2.5 pounds. Silver-sided and white-bellied, with a greenish streak on its back and a distinctiv­e lump behind its head, it prefers calm eddy waters where it feeds on insects.

Its only predator in the Colorado was another native, the pikeminnow, until trout were introduced in the early 20th century to create a sport fishery. Smallmouth bass, even more voracious, arrived in the 1990s.

The chub has gained ground since its listing as endangered in 1967, with about 12,000 in the Grand Canyon’s Little Colorado River, a tributary of the Colorado. Scientists estimate thousands more inhabit the main river farther downstream.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service last year loosened its designatio­n to threatened — no longer a step away from extinction, but still highly vulnerable. Some environmen­tal groups disagree, calling the move premature as the river’s plunge heightens predation danger.

As early as this fall, significan­t numbers of bass and other nonnatives could slip out through the dam, said Charles Yackulic, a U.S. Geological Survey statistici­an who has developed computer models of the threat.

Under the Endangered Species Act, government agencies are required to operate in ways that will not “jeopardize the continued existence” of listed animals. That includes infrastruc­ture.

 ?? National Park Service
via AP ?? ABOVE:
■ In this July 7, 2020 image provided by the National Park Service,
an adult chub is held on the Colorado River near Shinumo Creek, in Grand Canyon National
Park in Arizona. Low water levels upstream
at Lake Powell pose a new risk for the ancient
fish.
National Park Service via AP ABOVE: ■ In this July 7, 2020 image provided by the National Park Service, an adult chub is held on the Colorado River near Shinumo Creek, in Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona. Low water levels upstream at Lake Powell pose a new risk for the ancient fish.

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