The Oklahoman

Tishomingo hatchery helps save the paddlefish

- BY CRAIG SPRINGER U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Oklahoma’s only national fish hatchery has wrapped up its annual spring spawning of paddlefish.

The Tishomingo National Fish Hatchery, located 10 miles north of its namesake town, has spawned, raised and released paddlefish since 1992, returning what is arguably the oddest looking creature in Oklahoma back to its native waters.

The federal fish hatchery, which opened in 1929, began paddlefish production 25 years ago in the face of declining population­s across the fish’s native range.

The paddlefish naturally occurs in the large rivers feeding the Mississipp­i River basin from Montana to Louisiana. It’s a widerangin­g, animal, too.

Tagged fish have been shown to move hundreds of miles, particular­ly in the spring time when they ready themselves to spawn. As daylight increases, water temperatur­e warm and river flows ramp up, paddlefish are cued by nature to move to spawning habitats of gravel bars on shallow riffles.

And therein lays a conservati­on problem. They run headlong into dams and in many cases cannot get past them to spawn. Females absorb their eggs and fail to spawn.

Over time, paddlefish population­s above dams were depleted and that’s where the hatchery stepped in.

Staff from the national fish hatchery and Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservati­on converged recently at Grand Lake of the Cherokees near Miami to catch adult paddlefish.

“It’s heavy work,” said Kerry Graves, manager of the national fish hatchery. “We have to catch and transport 50-pound fish back to Tishomingo to spawn them in captivity.”

It is a laborious affair. The wild paddlefish are acclimated to captivity then anesthetiz­ed and eggs surgically removed and then fertilized. The sutured females then recover at the hatchery and are returned to their home waters. A 50-pound female yields approximat­ely 150,000 eggs. Eggs from six females may yield 50,000 young paddlefish by the time they are ready to be released in the wild in July.

Though that percentage of survival may seem low, it far exceeds survival rates that paddlefish face in the wild. Mortality of small paddlefish in their first year from predators— herons, kingfisher­s, bluegills, black bass and stripers— and diseases is naturally high.

Most of this year’s paddlefish spawn will be planted in Lake Eufaula, now in its 10th year of receiving paddlefish. Grand Lake of the Cherokees will get 2,000 while 5,000 paddlefish will go into Lake Redmond in Kansas. Another small set of fish will be stocked into an oxbow near Caddo Lake in Texas over the summer.

“Paddlefish are an amazing animal and part of Oklahoma’s natural heritage,” Graves said. “The fry look like clumsy tadpoles; bigger fish are oddshaped, fast-growing and boneless except for their jaw. They reach enormous size eating microscopi­c plankton—and their nearest relative swims in China half a world away.”

Paddlefish spawned at Tishomingo this spring will reach a foot long by July. Should a paddlefish grow to its full potential and its natural long life, it could reach 150 pounds and 7 feet long at 30 years of age.

 ??  ?? A paddlefish at the Tishomingo National Fish Hatchery.
[PHOTO BY RYAN HAGGERTY/USFW]
A paddlefish at the Tishomingo National Fish Hatchery. [PHOTO BY RYAN HAGGERTY/USFW]

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