In the recent past, many jurisdictions have experimented
with hatchery brood stock and management strategies combined with stocking
strategies that do not negatively impact remnants of native fish populations
and that put only genetically well suited fish into any location. It is a
key component of many restoration efforts important to Trout Unlimited, but we
tend to hear few after action reports evaluating the effectiveness of the
strategy. A group of researchers recently published an evaluation of one such
experiment that was reviewed in the Columbia Basin Bulletin. That review is
reprinted below and can be viewed on that organization's website, www.cbbulletin.com.
STUDY: FIRST GENERATION SUPPLEMENTATION FISH DO WELL AS WILD
A 15-year analysis of spawning steelhead in one Oregon fishery concludes that
fish from traditional hatcheries which migrate to the ocean and return to spawn
in natural habitat, produce fewer offspring than their wild relatives. The study used DNA tracking technology of
fish breeding in Hood River, and showed that traditional hatchery steelhead
produced 60 to 90 percent fewer surviving adult offspring than wild
steelhead. At the same, the research also
confirmed that fish from modern "supplementation" hatcheries, which
begin with eggs from native, wild fish, are about as successful as wild
steelhead.
Researchers say these fish can be used to boost the size of native populations
without causing obvious genetic harm, at least for one generation. The findings, by researchers from Oregon
State University and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, were just
published online in Conservation Biology, a professional journal.
"This provides very compelling data to confirm what we've suspected for
quite a while, that fish from traditional hatchery operations have a
much-reduced ability to reproduce and sustain a wild population," said
Michael Blouin, an OSU associate professor of zoology. "We've essentially created a fish
version of white lab mice," Blouin said.
"They are well-adapted to life in the hatchery, but do not
perpetuate themselves in a wild environment as successfully as native-born
fish. The good news, however, is that reducing the number of generations a
stock is passed through the hatchery can greatly increase the fitness of that
stock in its natural habitat."
The historic role of hatcheries was to produce fish for harvest, but a new
mission for many hatcheries is to produce breeders to add to dwindling wild
populations.
"Our work suggests that first-generation hatchery fish can be used to
provide a significant one-time boost to a wild population without apparent
damage to the genetics of the wild stock," Blouin said. "Whether you
can continue that on a long-term basis is still unclear. But it seems that at
least the first generation of fish produced this way function pretty
well."
Traditional steelhead and salmon hatcheries in Oregon, Blouin said, usually
worked with non-native fish that were repeatedly -- and purposefully -- bred
for generations in hatcheries. The offspring of hatchery fish actually made
better "domesticated" fish in the hatchery environment, he said,
where inadvertent selection for traits like a less aggressive temperament
produced stocks that had high egg-to-smolt survival in the hatchery. However, researchers note that genetic
characteristics that make good hatchery specimens work against the offspring of
those fish when the offspring are born into a competitive and predatory wild
environment.
The techniques used in supplementation hatcheries -- use of local, wild-born
fish for eggs -- have been designed specifically to minimize those genetic
effects of the hatchery. And it appears that at least on a short-term basis,
Blouin said, they can achieve that goal.
To study the issue, researchers used "genetic fingerprinting"
techniques to track the pedigrees of fish in Oregon's Hood River, doing DNA
analysis with scales taken from about 15,000 fish since 1991. The relative
reproductive success of wild fish and supplementation hatchery fish was
compared to fish from traditional hatchery programs, by matching returning
adult offspring to their parents that had spawned in the river in years past.
The study found that steelhead from traditional hatcheries had about 10 to 40
percent the reproductive success of wild fish.
By contrast, fish from a supplementation hatchery had reproductive
success indistinguishable from wild fish, and crosses between wild fish and
supplementation hatchery fish also appeared healthy.
"By tracing the lineage of those fish, we've shown pretty clearly that
fish from traditional hatcheries do not reproduce as successfully as wild fish,
and thus could potentially drag down the health of wild populations by
interbreeding with them," Blouin said. "But in places where we need a
short-term boost to a wild population, it also appears that supplementation
hatcheries may work well and not cause significant problems."
Although first-generation supplementation fish were as
successful as wild fish, the researchers were hesitant to recommend
supplementation as a long-term solution for dwindling wild runs.
"With many generations of supplementation you inevitably start using fish
for broodstock that have hatchery ancestors," Blouin said. "Whether
this results in enough domestication to cause problems down the road is still
an open question. All we can say for now is that supplementation does not
appear to be harmful in the short term."
The research considered only the genetic background and lineage of the
fish, Blouin said, and did not take into account any other environmental or
fishery management issues. If a stream or fishery environment is severely
altered or degraded, he said, adding supplementation hatchery fish to the
system will do little to achieve a self-sustaining wild population.
This research was supported by the Bonneville Power Administration and the
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.