John Batt, manager of 果酱视频鈥檚 Aquatron, is heading up Dal鈥檚 side of a group initiative to replenish Nova Scotia鈥檚 dwindling salmon population.
The project was initiated by Parks Canada in 2019, and on Oct. 6, the team released its first batch of 18 salmon smolts into the Clyburn Brook in Cape Breton鈥檚 Highlands National Park.
鈥淧arks Canada collects small salmon parr, which are four to six inches long, more like five to seven inches long. They bring them to us [the Aquatron] and we grow them bigger to sexual maturation. Then they go back and put them in the river,鈥 says Batt.
The Parks Canada Aquatron project differs from other hatchery enhancement projects, which mate fish in captivity and release babies into the wild.
鈥淚n this case, we鈥檙e releasing the grown-up fish so they can go and make more fish. It鈥檚 sort of a different strategy. It offers some advantages in that the fish make all the selection. Fish are talking to fish, deciding whose babies are whose.鈥
Batt explains that a single small salmon can produce approximately 1000 eggs, and a large salmon produces more.
鈥淥ne animal can have a massive contribution to the survival of their species.鈥
Freshwater salmon parr swim in an Aquatron facility tank. A net keeps the fish from jumping out of the tank.
Aquatron brings special services to the project
Currently, the Dal Aquatron is the largest of its kind in any Canadian university. It was chosen by Parks Canada over other aquatic services based on size and specialty services.
鈥淲e have our own vets on campus. Chris Harvey-Clark is our university director of animal care and 果酱视频鈥檚 official vet. So, we have very quick response to any health issues,鈥 Batt explains.
The partnership with Dr. Harvey-Clark offers Aquatron additional advantages in accessible animal-care equipment. One tool, Batt and Dr. Harvey-Clark have found useful is a veterinary ultrasound machine.
鈥淚n August of this year, we started looking at the 2019 cohort of parr and we had four fish with what we call, phenotypic in size. They had outward body expression that showed them to be gravid. They were starting to carry eggs and looked like they鈥檇 be ready to spawn this year.鈥
When the Aquatron team got a return date for the fish from Parks Canada a month later, they checked the fish again. This time the team used the ultrasound machine. They found 14 more fish ready to be released.
鈥淯sing tools like this, along with expertise we鈥檝e been developing, we鈥檙e able to bring more fish back to the wild than originally thought.鈥
Releasing the salmon smolts on time is crucial to the success of the replenishment project. In using specialty tools like the ultrasound, Batt and his team ensure more healthy salmon reach the river.
From tank to riverbank
Changing a fish鈥檚 environment causes stress. The Dal Aquatron team works to minimize this stress as much as possible. The fish are taken from fresh water, raised in fresh water, and returned to fresh water before they鈥檙e old enough to make the journey to sea.
鈥淲hen you bring these fish in, they鈥檙e wild wish. Getting used to the feed and adapting to captivity is difficult. Our staff are trained aquatic animal care technicians. They understand what鈥檚 going on.鈥
Research tank at 果酱视频 Aquatron facility houses salmon parr. The fish will be weighed and separated before reaching maturity for release.
Batt explains early troubles with the project as fish and researchers struck a balance. Rather than sticking with the aquaculture feed normally used to raise salmon, Batt鈥檚 team created a new mix with a shrimp base.
鈥淚t鈥檚 more closely related to what their wild diet would be. So, to the salmon it smells more like food than an aquaculture diet. The aquaculture food is really healthy for fish. It鈥檚 dialed into what they need, but at the same time we want them to eat it. So, we sometimes combine the two.鈥
The new feed was a hit, and between changing nutrition and performing regular health checks, the second batch of salmon found balance earlier than the first.
鈥淲here normally it takes a week or two to get wild fish to start feeding, the group that鈥檚 targeted to return next year were eating within 24-hours of arrival.鈥
Sending the fish back to the river as smolts requires equal adaptation.
鈥淲e try to get our conditions as close to the river as we can to make the physiological transfer easier. We can adjust the oxygen and temperature and a few other things.鈥
While the hopes for the project remain high, results of the released fish might take years to discover.
鈥淧arks Canada has been swimming the river doing observations, but we don鈥檛 have a whole lot to report yet. It鈥檚 really hard to monitor fish you release into the wild. They go where they want to go. That鈥檚 the unknown of it.鈥
The team has taken DNA samples from the fish they release, for later observation and comparison.
鈥淚f in five years, the returns of fish coming back to the river are high, they can sample those fish and compare the DNA. This way, we can find out if any of the fish that came through 果酱视频 contributed to the fish swimming in through the ocean.鈥
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