The Scotsman

Deer legs could help get salmon to return

● Fish being fed to raise survival rates ● Only five out of 100 come back

- By JOHN JEFFAY newsdeskts@scotman.com

Salmon are being fed with the help of the legs of locallycul­led deer to help boost their survival rates.

The scheme is being trialled at the River Muick, in the Grampian mountains in Aberdeensh­ire.

Legs from the deer are being placed in clusters at various points along the river.

In the past, adult salmon would die and nutrients from their carcasses would help increase insect population­s, providing food for younger fish.

However, with the number of adult salmon returning to the river from the sea plummeting, there is now a scarcity of food in the water.

It is estimated that for every 100 salmon which migrate from rivers, five return, whereas40t­o50yearsag­oaround40 would have made it back.

The River Dee’s fisheries board and trust have partnered with the James Hutton Institute to test the impact of the initiative.

Ross Macdonald, fisheries developmen­t officer, said: “In times past when there were thousands and thousands of salmon in the river, there were lots and lots of carcasses which would provide nutrients to the aquatic environmen­t.

“Over time, the number of adult salmon returning to Scottish rivers has dropped quite markedly, meaning the number of carcasses are declining as well.

“We have got bundles of deer legs placed in different clusters across the river, in different volumes, and plan to monitor the impact.”

The organisati­on will monitor the difference­s in numbers of young salmon via electrofis­hing, a permitted process where a light current is used to stun the fish so they can be counted.

Lorraine Hawkins, river director for the board, said if the scheme does have an impact it should become apparent “quite quickly”.

“The idea of nutrient addition is commonplac­e in parts of North America,” she said.

“There was a similar project trialled in the River Conon in Ross-shire a few years ago but that involved fish pellets.

“We are doing a bit of that but using deer legs from the local estates, so it’s also a more sustainabl­e way of doing it.”

Last summer anglers warned the heatwave threatened to plunge the industry into crisis, with water levels in some of the most popular salmon rivers falling to drasticall­y low levels.

The Scottish Government has imposed a ban on salmonnett­ing since 2016 to protect dwindling stocks. The practice involves fishermen using nets to harvest wild salmon as they migrate between the sea and Scotland’s world-renowned rivers.

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