Recovery of critically endangered Atlantic whitefish hits milestone - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Recovery of critically endangered Atlantic whitefish hits milestone

A program to save critically endangered Atlantic whitefish in Nova Scotia takes an important step later today.

DFO will release 150 juvenile fish into Petite Rivirewatershed near Bridgewater

Inside Dalhousie University's 'Noah's Ark' for whitefish

2 years ago
Duration 2:33
The Aquatron Laboratory at Dalhousie University is home to nearly 2,000 Atlantic whitefish. They'll eventually be released back into the wild as part of an effort to save the critically endangered species. Paul Withers has the story.

Aprogram to save critically endangered Atlantic whitefish in Nova Scotia takes an important step Thursday.

Juvenile Atlantic whitefish raised in captivity at Dalhousie University in Halifax will be released on a large scale into the Petite Rivirewatershed in the Bridgewaterarea. It is wherethewild population remains.

The 150 fish releasedwill be the first in a series. Hundreds of fish will be placedinto the wild by year's end.

"It definitely feels like a milestone, like we're getting somewhere," saidJeremy Broome, a Department of Fisheries and Oceans biologist working on the project.

"We're making really good progress and it's exciting."

Andrew Breen, a technician with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, holds up the first captive-breeding Atlantic whitefish released into the wild. (Submitted by Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada)

An ancient relative of salmon, the Atlantic whitefish is seriously threatened in the wild.The last population on the planet exists in three lakes in the Petite Rivire watershed.

Genetic analysisby Dalhousie University's Marine Gene Probe Lab has indicated as few as 13females capable of reproducing remain.

To save the species, larval whitefish have been taken from the wild to Dalhousie University starting in 2018.

Juvenile Atlantic whitefish have been held in these tanks for one week to acclimate to local lake water and wild food. (Submitted by Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada)

Those fish have grown into a broodstock.They spawned this winter.

Offspring have been driven to the watershed and placed in tanks. Following a week of experimental acclimation to lake water and to wean from pellet feed to wild food, the fish are moved to an in-lake enclosure for further monitoring and adjustto local conditions.

"The results have been very promising thus far," said Broome. "Survival has been very high and better than I even expected."

Federal government axed first breeding program

On June 16, a test of protocols and procedures concluded with 22juveniles released into Milipsigate Lake, one of the three lakes in the system.

It marked the first use of captive breeding for Atlantic whitefish in nearly a decade.

Dalhousie University is filling a gap created when the federal government axed the DFO captive breeding program in 2013.

Juvenile Atlantic whitefish are seen inside one of the blue tanks before they are released. (Submitted by Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada)

A few months after the buildings used by DFO were demolished, invasive chain pickerel were discovered inside the watershed.

There were concerns the predator's arrival doomed the Atlantic whitefish. Sightings of adult whitefish have since plummeted.

Dalhousie steps in

But the presence of larval whitefish every year shows at least some breeding adults remain.

Earlier this year,DFO awarded Dalhousie a five-year contract worth $420,750 for "holding, raising and captive breeding" of Atlantic whitefish.

The program offers a prospect not considered for many years moving beyond survival to rebuilding the population.

The fish spend a last week inside in-lake enclosures before being released into the Petite Rivirewatershed. (Submitted by Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada)

About 1,500 fish will be released this year. Five hundredwill go in Milipsigate Lake. Another 1,000will goin the lower part of the Petite Rivire system, which is separated from the three lakes by a dam.

The lower part of the system is accessible to the ocean and could measure the fish's instinct to return to the sea. A fishway in the systemallows fish to return or migrate upstream.

Broome saidall of this will take time.

"This is not something [where] we're going to be able to necessarily detect results immediately," he said. "We're going to be looking for two to three years out to eventually be seeing the results or the impacts of the releases we're doing."