The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

America’s forgotten dinosaurs show signs of life

- By Ben Finley, Patrick Whittle and John Flesher

CHARLES CITY, VA. >> Sturgeon were America’s vanishing dinosaurs, armorplate­d beasts that crowded the nation’s rivers until mankind’s craving for caviar pushed them to the edge of extinction.

More than a century later, some population­s of the massive bottom feeding fish are showing signs of recovery in the dark corners of U.S. waterways.

Increased numbers are appearing in the cold streams of Maine, the lakes of Michigan and Wisconsin and the coffee-colored waters of Florida’s Suwannee River.

A 14-foot Atlantic sturgeon — as long as a Volkswagen Beetle — was recently spotted in New York’s Hudson River.

“It’s really been a dramatic reversal of fortune,” said Greg Garman, a Virginia Commonweal­th University ecologist who studies Atlantic sturgeon in Virginia’s James River. “We didn’t think they were there, frankly. Now, they’re almost every place we’re looking.”

Following the late 1800s caviar rush, America’s nine sturgeon species and subspecies were plagued by pollution, dams and overfishin­g. Steep declines in many population­s weren’t fully apparent until the 1990s.

“However, in the past three decades, sturgeon have been among the most studied species in North America as a result of their threatened or endangered status,” said James Crossman, president of The North American Sturgeon and Paddlefish Society, a conservati­on group.

Scientists have been finding sturgeon in places where they were thought to be long gone. And they’re seeing increased numbers of them in some rivers because of cleaner water, dam removals and fishing bans.

These discoverie­s provide some hope for a fish that is among the world’s most threatened.

But the U.S. sturgeon population is only a tiny fraction of what it once was — and the health of each species and regional population­s vary widely.

While some white sturgeon population­s on the Pacific Coast are abundant enough to support limited recreation­al and commercial fishing, Alabama sturgeon are so rare that none have been caught for years.

Across America, dams still keep some sturgeon population­s low by blocking ancient spawning routes. And the fish face newer threats such as rising water temperatur­es from climate change and the sharp propellers of cargo ships.

It will take decades to measure a population’s recovery, experts say. Sturgeon sometimes live longer than humans. And they spawn infrequent­ly, often requiring half a century to bounce back from overfishin­g.

Environmen­talists warn that more conservati­on efforts are still needed.

“They’ve survived relatively unchanged for 200 million years,” said Jeff Miller, a senior conservati­on advocate at the Center for Biological Diversity, which is planning a lawsuit seeking federal safeguards for sturgeon in the Great Lakes and Mississipp­i River watersheds. “If they’re going to survive us, they’re going to need additional protection.”

Sturgeon swam with the dinosaurs. Bony plates line their bodies. Whisker-like barbels hang from their chins. Their toothless mouths telescope out and vacuum up anything from worms to mussels.

Their meat fed Native Americans, the starving settlers of Jamestown and the Lewis and Clark expedition. Delaware River shad fishermen would yank up their nets as thousands of sturgeons swam toward spawning grounds.

Then came caviar. The Russian delicacy of saltcured sturgeon eggs became a fad for Europe’s new middle class —and that took a heavy toll on American sturgeon.

“People just massacred them, just like we massacred the buffalo,” said Inga Saffron, author of the 2002 history “Caviar.”

“The difference being they were catching the sturgeon as they were migrating to spawn,” she said. “Not only did they kill the fish, they killed future generation­s of fish.”

By 1900, American sturgeon population­s were collapsing. Dams were going up. Pollution sucked oxygen from rivers.

But as decades passed, fishing bans took effect, and environmen­tal laws became stronger.

Among the species showing improvemen­t is Atlantic sturgeon, whose range stretches from Florida to eastern Canada.

The population around the Chesapeake Bay was feared to be extinct in the mid-1990s. Now, thousands of are believed to be there, according to Virginia Commonweal­th University scientists.

Last fall, Matthew Balazik, a sturgeon research ecologist with the university and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, netted more than 200 baby Atlantic sturgeon in the James River — the first seen there in years. “This could be a kind of a comeback generation,” Balazik said.

Not every river is seeing improvemen­t. Dewayne Fox, a fisheries professor at Delaware State University, said the Delaware River’s population remains low, possibly because of collisions with cargo vessels or dredging on spawning grounds.

But overall, Atlantic sturgeon appear to be slowly recovering after a species-wide fishing moratorium went into effect in 1998, according to a 2017 assessment by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A researcher holds an endangered shortnose sturgeon caught in a net in the Saco River in Biddeford, Maine. The fish was measured and tagged before being released by students at the University of New England.
ROBERT F. BUKATY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A researcher holds an endangered shortnose sturgeon caught in a net in the Saco River in Biddeford, Maine. The fish was measured and tagged before being released by students at the University of New England.

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