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Why Windsor-Essex is one of the last regions in Canada where you can see baby sturgeon

- Oliver Thompson

At up to two metres long and weighing 200 pounds, sturgeon are some of the Great Lakes' most enchan‐ ting fish.

"I always think of them as lonely torpedoes cruising through the Great Lakes," Trevor Pitcher, University of Windsor (UWindsor) profes‐ sor, told Windsor Morning. "It's essentiall­y a living fossil. It's the closest anybody comes to seeing a dinosaur alive today."

A sturgeon's natural envi‐ ronment is the vast lakes and river ways of North America. But in recent decades, their population­s have been de‐ clining.

"The decline has varied over the years," Pitcher said. "Years ago it used to be be‐ cause of over harvesting in the Great Lakes. [In the] early 1900s we took advantage of that food resource. Then, eventually, shipping lanes ru‐ ined their spawning habitat and dams for electricit­y."

Now, a UWindsor project, partnered with the Great Lakes Institute For Environ‐ mental Research (GLIER), is breeding the fishes for even‐ tual release into the Detroit River.

In fact, the project means that Windsor is perhaps the only place in Canada where you can see juvenile stur‐ geon in vast quantities.

From captivity to the lake

Reintroduc­ing sturgeon to the river isn't as simple as breeding a fish and then throwing it in the water when it comes of age.

Instead, UWindsor's team is focused on naturalizi­ng ju‐ venile sturgeon to their envi‐ ronment so that future gen‐ erations will flourish in the wild.

"They're actually raising them in LaSalle right on the Detroit River in these tanks that range from essentiall­y no background ... to a very enriched tank with tons of rocks and other things that are more naturalize­d," Pitch‐ er said. "Then they're com‐ paring their behaviours, their stress and their swimming abilities to see which ones do best before we let them go in the future."

Once the sturgeon are ready for the river, they will be released to go about their lives.

These fish have a life span of decades, and thanks to numerous partners, includ‐ ing in the United States, the UWindsor team can keep track of the fish as they flourish.

"A lot of times all the fish have tags in them, so we ac‐ tually end up following them for essentiall­y decades after the program," Pitcher said. "These guys have kept their ancient form for that long so they live a long time, partly because they're large and they're slow growing."

Olivia Galloway is an MSc student at UWindsor. She works with Pitcher on the project.

"I do get to go in every month, measure them and see how they're growing, so that is very fun," she told CBC News.

"Right now we're just rear‐ ing them in different environ‐ ments to see if it affects their ability to handle stress, if it affects their growth."

It's a project that will be years in the making, but for

Pitcher, that's what makes these fish so fascinatin­g.

"The sturgeon swimming by you today probably swam by your grandparen­ts almost 80 years ago."

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