fish report header

Extinction Rates of Freshwater Fish in North America

One of the earth's many marvels is its ability to preserve the past, which we uncover in the fossil record and can use to decipher the history of our world. The more fossils that we unearth, the more we learn about the past events that have made the planet what it is today. Currently, the oldest fossil record dates back roughly 3.4 billion years and research has shown that extinction is a natural part of life. Fossil history indicates that 95-99% of all species that have ever existed have gone extinct (see video "Extinction!"). A species can be eliminated from the planet by a variety of different causes including gradual geologic changes that happen over millions of years, or an event that causes mass extinction, such as an asteroid, which can happen over a shorter timescale. Regardless of the cause, it is estimated that on average one species goes extinct every four million years.

 

A recent report by the USGS published in the September issue of BioScience, describes the extinction of freshwater fishes in North America and compares this rate to extinctions over a geologic time scale. According to fossil record one species of freshwater fish goes extinct in North America every 3 million years (Stanley, 1985), but between 1898 and 2006 a total of 39 species and 18 subspecies have become extinct in North America. The study estimates that the modern rate of extinction has already increased to 877 every million years and the number of North American freshwater fishes to go extinct is likely to double to 53-86 species by 2050. Meanwhile, it is estimated that 83 species and subspecies of freshwater fishes have become extinct on different continents around the world including 57 in North America, 19 in Eurasia, 5 in Africa and Madagascar, 1 in South America and 1 throughout Oceania (Figure 1). While these numbers may appear to indicate that extinctions are more common in North America, the discrepancy likely relates to the number of fish investigations conducted in each region.

 

A growing number of scientists believe that the recent spike in the extinction rate of freshwater fishes is most likely the result of human influences. Throughout the 20th century, rivers in North America became increasingly polluted and were modified for flood control and water conveyance. Dams have been important for the development of North America because they have decreased flood risk, generated power and stored water for human consumption, but these changes in the natural environment have eliminated much of the freshwater habitat and constricted fishes to smaller reaches. As the environment around them has been changing at a rapid pace, many freshwater fish species are having trouble adapting.

Follow Us!  Like us on Facebook  View our photos on flickr  View our videos on YouTube

email list
Recent Blog Post
Tunnel Vision 

People frequently come to us with new or challenging circumstances for research in aquatic environments, and that is certainly the case with one of the projects we are currently working on. In this situation, we want to use Passive Integrated Transponder (PIT) tags to detect and record presence of individual fish and turtles that may become entrained into a diversion tunnel. This is quite a tunnel, measuring about 12 feet wide, 15 feet high, and nearly 20,000 feet long. Detecting entrainment in this tunnel is further complicated by the fact that anything installed inside the tunnel will be inaccessible for a year and must be robust enough to withstand the pressure of water flowing up to the roof... Read more > 

Recent Job Announcements 

Erratum  

In a previous report FISHBIO stated that the California hatchery review recommends moving to 100% tagging and marking of hatchery origin fish. In fact, the hatchery review recommends to continue 25% marking while tagging 100% of releases.
Extinct Fish
Figure 1. Number of fish estimated to become extinct by decade on the North America continent compared to other continents including Africa and Madagascar, Eurasia, South America, and Oceania (Burkhead, 2012).

IN THE NEWS: Recent stories you might have missed...
Dam removal results in record spring-run Chinook on Battle Creek
Record Searchlight

Battle Creek Project

Fisheries officials said they have not seen any effect on salmon in Battle Creek spawning downstream of the Ponderosa Fire. A record number of spring-run Chinook Salmon swam up Battle Creek this year and one of the largest runs of fall-run salmon in many years is making its way up the Sacramento River toward the creek now. So far, fisheries biologists have not received any reports of fish being affected by the Ponderosa Fire six miles upstream near Manton... Read more>

Battle brews over how to reinforce Sacramento's levee system
KCRA News

Delta levee

Sacramento's levee system is critical for protecting nearly half a million people from floods. But there's a battle brewing over how best to reinforce those levees and on Tuesday, a Sacramento congresswoman took aim at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. "Katrina was a wake-up call for the nation," Rep. Doris Matsui told KCRA 3. "In 2006 after Katrina, they decided they wanted to get rid of all vegetation including trees on the levee,... Read more>

Colvilles install salmon weir across Okanogan River
Spokesman Review

A temporary picket-style salmon weir recently installed was installed on the Okanogan River about 15 miles upstream from its confluence with the Columbia River near Brewster, the Colville Tribe reports. The structure spans the Okanogan river, but leaves room along the west bank for small waterdraft to pass around the weir. The weir was installed a mile downstream from Malott Bridge during three weeks of construction... Read more > 

Protected sea lions gorge on threatened salmon
Nature

What do you do when a charismatic marine mammal is wreaking havoc by gorging on a threatened species that humans also find delicious? That's the awkward problem faced by wildlife managers along the Columbia River in Washington and Oregon states, where sea lions have been congregating for the past decade to feast on salmon waiting to climb the fish ladders at the base of the Bonneville Dam on their spring voyage upriver to spawn... Read more > 

MSC-certified fish stocks less likely to be harmfully exploited

FIS      

A new study analyses the performance of Marine Stewardship Council (MSC)-certified fish stocks for the first time. The study found that MSC-certified seafood is three to five times less likely to be subject to harmful fishing than uncertified seafood. The MSC ecolabel currently appears on over 15,000 products worldwide. Scientists compared status and abundance trends of 45 certified stocks with those of 179 uncertified stocks,... Read more >  

Ocean life facing major shock

Science Alert 

Life in the world's oceans faces far greater change and risk of large-scale extinctions than at any previous time in human history, a team of the world's leading marine scientists has warned. The researchers from Australia, the US, Canada, Germany, Panama, Norway and the UK have compared events which drove massive extinctions of sea life in the past with what is observed to be taking place in the seas and oceans globally today... Read more > 

fishbio.com     info@fishbio.com