Using a head‐start conservation intervention to boost spawning numbers of the endangered Clanwilliam sandfish

Author:

Cerrilla Cecilia12ORCID,Flemming Leonard3,Griffiths Charles L.1,Impson Dean2,Jordaan Martine S.456,Kajee Mohammed127,Paxton Bruce R.2,van der Walt Johannes A.8,Whitehead Thomas Otto2,Shelton Jeremy M.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

2. Freshwater Research Centre Cape Town South Africa

3. Wemmershoek Diagnostic Laboratory Paarl South Africa

4. CapeNature Biodiversity Capabilities Unit CapeNature Stellenbosch South Africa

5. NRF‐South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (SAIAB) Makhanda South Africa

6. Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology CapeNature Biodiversity Capabilities Unit Stellenbosch South Africa

7. DSI/NRF Research Chair in Inland Fisheries and Freshwater Ecology South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (SAIAB) Makhanda South Africa

8. Advanced Environmental Corporation Porterville South Africa

Abstract

AbstractFreshwater ecosystems are the most threatened on Earth, with many species facing extinction. The Clanwilliam sandfish (Labeo seeberi) is South Africa's most threatened migratory freshwater fish and is endemic to the Olifants–Doring River system in the Cape Fold Ecoregion. Non‐native fish predation and river desiccation have caused a recruitment bottleneck, severely compromising juvenile survival and resulting in a declining population of aging sandfish. The Saving Sandfish Project launched an emergency head‐start intervention in 2020 to reduce extinction risk. We (1) rescued juvenile sandfish from drying pools in a key spawning tributary (the Biedouw River); (2) relocated them to 6 off‐stream reservoirs; and (3) released reservoir‐reared sandfish back into their natal river once large enough to evade non‐native fish predation. Here, we estimate survival in the reservoir environment, evaluate return rates relative to wild run size, and assess the probability of return based on conditions at release. Between 2020 and 2022, we stocked 33,391 juvenile sandfish into the 6 reservoirs. After 1 year, the estimated survival rate at one reservoir was 0.679 (range based on 95% CI: 0.385–0.973). Release and return results are presented only for the first (2020) rescue cohort. In 2021, we released 1277 sandfish from 2 reservoirs into the Biedouw River, comprising 16.6% of the 2020 rescue cohort. Mean size at release was 169 mm (SE 0.6) total length. Of those released, 994 were PIT‐tagged. A total of 77 PIT‐tagged sandfish were recorded during the 2022 spawning migration—a return rate of 7.7% of tagged releases in the first year of returns. Size of fish and distance from the Doring River at release were significant predictors of return probability, with larger fish released further from the Doring experiencing a higher probability of return. This program serves as a model for the conservation of freshwater fish where there is an imminent and high risk of extinction.

Funder

Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund

National Geographic Society

Rufford Foundation

University of Cape Town

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

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