Pesticide and Environmental Update
Silent
Streams?
Nearly 40 percent of fish species in North American
streams, rivers and lakes are now in jeopardy, according to the most
detailed evaluation of the conservation status of freshwater fishes in the
last 20 years.
The 700 fishes now listed represent a staggering 92
percent increase over the 364 listed as "imperiled" in the
previous 1989 study published by the American Fisheries Society.
Researchers classified each of the 700 fishes listed as either vulnerable
(230), threatened (190), or endangered (280). In addition, 61 fishes are
presumed extinct.
The new report, published in Fisheries, was
conducted by a U.S. Geological Survey-led team of scientists from the
United States, Canada and Mexico, who examined the status of continental
freshwater and diadromous (those that migrate between rivers and oceans)
fish.
"Freshwater fish have continued to decline
since the late 1970s, with the primary causes being habitat loss,
dwindling range and introduction of non-native species," said Mark
Myers, director of the USGS. "In addition, climate change may further
affect these fish."
Most Vulnerable Groups
The groups of fish most at risk are the highly
valuable salmon and trout of the Pacific Coast and western mountain
regions; minnows, suckers and catfishes throughout the continent; darters
in the Southeastern United States; and pupfish, livebearers, and goodeids,
a large, native fish family in Mexico and the Southwestern United States.
Nearly half of the carp and minnow family and the
Percidae (family of darters, perches and their relatives) are in jeopardy.
Fish families important for sport or commercial fisheries also had many
populations at risk. More than 60 percent of the salmon and trout had at
least one population or subspecies in trouble, while 22 percent of
sunfishes — which includes the well-known species such as black bass,
bluegill and rock bass — were listed. Even one of the most popular game
species in the United States, striped bass, has populations on the list.
Regions with the Most Troubled Fish
Regions with especially notable numbers of troubled
fish include the Southeastern United States, the mid-Pacific coast, the
lower Rio Grande and basins in Mexico that do not drain to the sea.
Hotspots of regional biodiversity and greatest
levels of endangerment are the Tennessee (58 fishes), Mobile (57), and the
southeastern Atlantic Slope river systems (34). The Pacific central
valley, western Great Basin, Rio Grande and rivers of central Mexico also
have high diversity and numbers of fish in peril, according to the report.
Many of the troubled fish are restricted to only a single drainage.
"Human populations have greatly expanded in many of these watersheds,
compounding negative impacts on aquatic ecosystems," noted Howard
Jelks, a USGS researcher and the senior author of the paper.
Degree of Trouble
Of fish on the 1989 imperiled list, 89 percent are
either still listed with the same conservation status or have become even
more at risk. Only 11 percent improved in status or were delisted. The
authors emphasized that improved public awareness and proactive management
strategies are needed to protect and recover these aquatic treasures.
"Fish are not the only aquatic organisms
undergoing precipitous declines," said USGS researcher Noel Burkhead,
a lead author on the report and the chair of the AFS Endangered Species
Committee. "Freshwater crayfishes, snails and mussels are exhibiting
similar or even greater levels of decline and extinction."
The authors noted that the list was based on the
best biological information available. "We believe this report will
provide national and international resource managers, scientists and the
conservation community with reliable information to establish
conservation, management and recovery priorities," said Stephen
Walsh, another lead author and USGS researcher.
This is the third compilation of imperiled,
freshwater and diadromous fishes of North America prepared by the American
Fisheries Society's Endangered Species Committee. Additional information
is available at http://fisc.er.usgs.gov/afs/
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