|
|
Giant fishes threatened with extermination
Practical Fishkeeping (UK). 2 July 2007.
http://www.practicalfishkeepin g.co.uk/pfk/pages/item.php ?news=1294
An article in the latest issue of the journal Science highlights the
plight of giant freshwater fishes.
In the article by Richard Stone, entitled "The Last of the
Leviathans", the extinction threats to some of the world's largest
freshwater fishes are highlighted.
The article also discusses the hope that a three-year "Megafishes
Project" sponsored by the National Geographic Society and undertaken
by University of Nevada fisheries biologist Zeb Hogan, would be able
to protect these fishes threatened by overfishing and habitat
degradation.
A number of the largest freshwater fish species (about 20 species that
reach 200 cm and beyond, and weigh in excess of 100 kg) are found in
the Mekong River, and this is where Hogan's research has begun.
This includes the Mekong giant catfish, Pangasianodon gigas, which is
threatened by both overfishing (the flesh of this species is highly
prized in Thailand, fetching up to $15 per kilogram) and habitat
degradation in the form of large dams that threaten to disrupt the
spawning migration of this species and proposed schemes to dynamite
and dredge the presumed spawning ground of this species in order to
improve river navigability.
In Chiang Khong in Thailand, fishermen landed 20 individuals of this
species in 1999, none in 2001-2003, seven in 2004 and four in 2005.
A voluntary fishing moratorium was imposed in 2006, and this year, all
individuals caught are strictly for research purposes: any giant
catfish caught are tagged and released in return for cash.
Other giant freshwater species for which information is scarce and
under the threat of extirpation include the Pirarucu, Arapaima gigas,
of south America, a species that must surface to gulp air every 15
minutes or so.
This need to surface makes them vulnerable to harpoon fishing and the
average capture size has been drastically decreasing in recent
decades.
It is believed that there are more than one species of arapaima, and
some of these undescribed species are in danger of going extinct
before they can be scientifically studied.
The Chinese paddlefish, Psephurus gladius, is a giant freshwater fish
species that may already be past the point of no return.
Habitat modification, pollution and heavy boat traffic along the
Yangtze River may already have effectively doomed this species to
extinction.
The situation for some of the giant freshwater fishes is brighter,
thanks to topography, and rarely, sound management.
The giant perch, Lates angustifrons, in Lake Tanganyika has "...a
huge, deep lake to hide in and relatively low-technology fisheries
methods to contend with," according to Peter McIntyre, a fish
biologist at Wright State University.
In North America, sound management has saved the Lake sturgeon,
Acipenser fulvescens, from extinction. However, these cases are rare
and many of the other giant species remain severely threatened.
The plight of large freshwater fishes has attracted little attention
until recently.
According to Stone: "Unlike pandas, their cuddly appeal is nil" and
according to Hogan: "People have a hard time sympathizing with fish".
Hopefully, Hogan's research will be able to make an impact.
According to the article, some experts believe that the Mekong is a
key battleground in the fight to save the giant fishes: "...Hogan's
success at translating concern into action may mean the difference
between a resurgence in the wild and a gloomy existence as the last
living representatives of their species."
For more information, see the article: Stone, R (2007) The Last of the
Leviathans. Science 316, 1684-188.
|
 |
The Mekong River is comprised of the main channel, which is important perennial habitat for a diverse assemblage of fish species, and floodplains that provide critical seasonal habitat for many species.
|
|
 |
|