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Saving sturgeon: ancient fish face increasingly tough times.


On a fine spring day alongside a Wisconsin river, several biologists wrestle a muscular, 120-pound fish onto her back and straddle In the stock and commodity markets, a strategy in options contracts consisting of an equal number of put options and call options on the same underlying share, index, or commodity future.  her. The moves wouldn't be out o ace in a rodeo.

As the team restrains her, one member massages her swollen belly, working her eggs out of a release vent and into a plastic pail. The late-April scene occurs as, throughout the northern Midwest, water temperatures climb above 56[degrees]F (13[degrees]C) and lake sturgeon swim upstream to spawn. In several rivers, biologists such as these give Mother Nature an assist.

"This is the highlight of my year," says Steven J. Fajfer, who supervises propagation of lake sturgeon for the Wild Rose (Wis.) Fish Hatchery hatchery

a commercial establishment dedicated to the hatching of bird eggs to provide day old chicks and poults to the poultry industry.


hatchery liquid
the contents of unfertilized eggs. Used in petfood manufacture.
.

His team starts by netting several males, each about 20 pounds and 4 feet long. Gentle hands slide down each animal's belly to eject its sperm before the fish is returned to the water, Fajfer explains.

Then, the real heavy lifting begins. The researchers scout for a 55- to 75-inch female of this species (Acipenser fulvescens) splashing along cobbled cob·ble 1  
n.
1. A cobblestone.

2. Geology A rock fragment between 64 and 256 millimeters in diameter, especially one that has been naturally rounded.

3. cobbles See cob coal.

tr.
 edges of the river. After hoisting her ashore, the biologists apply their rodeo moves to extract her eggs and then return the big mama to her stream.

Fajfer or one of his colleagues divides her eggs among a series of buckets and adds water and the freshly collected sperm. For the next 2 to 4 minutes, he explains, "we'll gently stir the eggs with our hands"--until they turn sticky, a sign that the eggs are fertilized fer·til·ize  
v. fer·til·ized, fer·til·iz·ing, fer·til·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To cause the fertilization of (an ovum, for example).

2.
. Later, the eggs are hauled to the hatchery where the young will emerge and be coddled for up to a year. Finally these juveniles and those from other rivers will be released, most into their natal streams.

Globally, many wild sturgeon get their start in life with substantial human help. The heroic interventions are likely to increase as populations of sturgeon species, precarious everywhere, continue to spiral downward.

Today, most sturgeon populations exist as tiny fragments of their abundance just 30 years ago, and many populations face possible--even probable--extinction. The caviar trade has driven overfishing Overfishing occurs when fishing activities reduce fish stocks below an acceptable level. This can occur in any body of water from a pond to the oceans. More precise biological and bioeconomic terms define 'acceptable level'. , but environmental changes also threaten sturgeon survival.

"It's not too late to save most sturgeon species," says Ellen K. Pikitch of the Pew Institute for Ocean Science in Miami. However, doing so will require large investments in captive rearing, law enforcement, political action, and research. "It won't be easy," she says.

LIVING FOSSILS For some 200 million years, sturgeon have been cruising the planet's rivers and seas, notes Phaedra Doukakis of the Pew Institute's New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 office. The 25 species remaining today don't look much different from their Jurassic ancestors.

All still have mouths at the bottom of their snouts and thin beards of whiskerlike barbels that can detect trace concentrations of waterborne chemicals.

Like the skeletons of similarly ancient sharks, a sturgeon's frame is made of cartilage, not bone. However, running from behind a sturgeons gills to its tail fins are five rows of sharp, diamond-shaped bumps. Called skutes, these bumps are bone protruding pro·trude  
v. pro·trud·ed, pro·trud·ing, pro·trudes

v.tr.
To push or thrust outward.

v.intr.
To jut out; project. See Synonyms at bulge.
 through the fish's skin, explains sturgeon physiologist Molly A.H. Webb of the Bozeman (Mont.) Fish Technology Center.

Sturgeon also resemble sharks in that they mature slowly. Males may be 12 years old and females 25 years old before they spawn for the first time. Then, the individual won't spawn again for 3 to 5 years. This rate of reproduction is slow, but it can continue for up to 60 years.

Sturgeon share reproductive characteristics with both fish and amphibians amphibians

members of the animal class Amphibia. Includes frogs, toads, newts, salamanders and cecilians all capable of living on land or in water.
, Webb notes. For instance, frog sperm have an acrosome acrosome /ac·ro·some/ (ak´ro-som) the caplike, membrane-bound structure covering the anterior portion of the head of a spermatozoon; it contains enzymes for penetrating the oocyte.

ac·ro·some
n.
, a structure that releases enzymes that penetrate the outer membrane of eggs during fertilization. Fish eggs, in contrast, have a tinyhole--a micropile--that a sperm must find and enter. Sturgeon show both acrosomes and micropiles.

Also unique: Males have vestigial ves·tig·i·al
adj.
Occurring or persisting as a rudimentary or degenerate structure.
 oviducts--channels for moving eggs--notes Diana Papoulias of the U.S. Geological Survey in Columbia, Mo. Moreover, she observes, unlike in other fish, the "oviducts" in both males and females are unconnected to the gonads.

There's plenty that biologists still don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 about reproduction in these fish. Those data gaps make it difficult for caviar harvesters, hatchery managers, aquaculture aquaculture, the raising and harvesting of fresh- and saltwater plants and animals. The most economically important form of aquaculture is fish farming, an industry that accounts for an ever increasing share of world fisheries production.  operators, and conservation biologists to be effective.

BLACK PEARLS Because caviar--sturgeon roe--commands up to $150 per ounce, connoisseurs expect quality eggs. Although sturgeon fishers could, in theory, harvest the pearly black roe as Fajfer's team does, the product wouldn't taste good, observes Serge I. Doroshov of the University of California, Davis The University of California, Davis, commonly known as UC Davis, is one of the ten campuses of the University of California, and was established as the University Farm in 1905. . Biochemical processes associated with ovulation ovulation /ovu·la·tion/ (ov?u-la´shun) the discharge of a secondary oocyte from a graafian follicle.ov´ulatory

o·vu·la·tion
n.
The discharge of an ovum from the ovary.
 induce off flavors and alter the texture of the roe.

"So, to get caviar," he explains, "you have to extract the entire ovaries Ovaries
The female sex organs that make eggs and female hormones.

Mentioned in: Choriocarcinoma

ovaries (ō´v
, killing the fish."

Today, legal harvests of wild sturgeon total some 3,000 metric tons (t) per year--down from a 1977 peak of more than 30,000 t, according to a survey of sturgeon trends reported by Pikitch, Doukakis, and their colleagues in the September 2005 Fish and Fisheries. This decline represents diminishing stocks offish off·ish  
adj.
Inclined to be distant and reserved; aloof.



offish·ly adv.

off
 throughout the Northern Hemisphere, not less fishing, the researchers say.

They also point out that these tallies don't include illegal harvests. According to data reported late last year by Switzerland and the European Union Switzerland took part in negotiating the European Economic Area agreement with the European Union. It signed the agreement on May 2, 1992, and submitted an application for accession to the EU on May 20, 1992. , policing agencies in Europe have seized 12 t of illegal caviar since 2000. Since that egg tonnage represents fish carcasses rivaling the annual tonnage offish caught legally, poaching poaching: see cooking.  probably exceeds legal harvests, Pikitch concludes.

Her team examined the sturgeon catches from 70 percent of the major fisheries in the world. The scientists found a drop of at least 85 percent from peak production.

Wild harvests are prohibited for several of the sturgeon species most endangered with extinction, such as the pallid pal·lid  
adj.
1. Having an abnormally pale or wan complexion: the pallid face of the invalid.

2. Lacking intensity of color or luminousness.

3.
 (Scaphirhynchus albus).

On Jan. 3, officials administering the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), announced that the treaty will from now on prohibit international commerce in all sturgeon from the Caspian Sea basin, the Black Sea--lower Danube River basin, and the Amur River basin of Russia and China.

A trade ban from these basins--the world's major caviar-exporting areas--must now be enforced by all of CITES' 169 signatory nations, including the United States. The restrictions remain in effect in each basin until the exporting nations there agree on quotas and management programs and supply data to CITES showing that their fishing and research activities aren't jeopardizing sturgeon populations, says David H.W. Morgan, who heads scientific support at CITES' headquarters in Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland
Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva.
.

The ban doesn't, however, apply to farmed sturgeon.

FARM-FRESH EGGS Over the past 2 decades, enterprising aquaculture developers anticipated the current wild-sturgeon shortage and took up farming the caviar producing fish. Today, three such farms for white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) are operating successfully outside Sacramento, Calif.

Aquaculturists there started in the early 1990s with 200 locally caught fish. The farms today annually produce close to 10 t of caviar, roughly equivalent to Russia's legal harvest of wild roe, says Doroshov, who has been a consultant since the project began.

Caviar production has proved "very artisanal," he notes. A roe har vest's flavor and texture depend on what the fish has eaten, the temperature and quality of the water it lived in, and how the eggs were processed after harvest. It's taken a while, but caviar from these farms has come to impress importers enough that the product is now sold throughout Europe at prices near those for wild roe.

The Mote Marine Laboratory Mote Marine Laboratory (and Aquarium) is a not-for-profit research and educational institution with an aquarium open to the public 365 days a year. Founded by Dr. Eugenie Clark in 1955 in Cape Haze, Florida, the early years of the laboratory specialized in shark research.  in Sarasota, Fla., has been investigating aquaculture of a different fish, the Siberian sturgeon (Acipenser baeri). The lab's commercial-scale demonstration tanks now house 65 t of sturgeon--including some 24,000 weighing at least a pound.

Mote's oldest female Siberian sturgeon are now 5 years old, "and we're expecting some caviar this year," says project leader Jim Michaels. With their customized food and accommodations, farmed sturgeon mature at roughly triple the rate of wild fish.

A side benefit of sturgeon farming, Michaels and Doroshov note, is that the study offish in aquaculture is paying rich dividends in knowledge about the biology of wild stocks too imperiled for researchers to capture for examination.

STRESSED SICK While overfishing has historically posed the greatest threat to sturgeon species, several environmental trends are also seriously stressing stocks, even some that are no longer fished.

A biological imperative drives spawning sturgeon to swim far upstream from the ocean, inland sea, or lake that they inhabit while they're not spawning. Over the past 150 years, however, people have been altering rivers. Some portions are deepened and straightened to facilitate barge traffic; others are dammed. These public works projects are now haunting government agencies charged with protecting sturgeon, notes Webb.

For instance, reshaping shipping channels removes slow-current areas where sturgeon feed. Altered rivers can also scour away the bottom-dwelling animals that the fish consume. Dams gate off some spawning regions, collect silt that buries previously rocky sturgeon haunts, and limit how well a river flushes out pollutants.

Scientists are beginning to see effects of these changes. For instance, fisheries biologist Grant W. Feist feist   also fice
n. Chiefly Southern U.S.
A small mongrel dog.



[Variant of obsolete fist, short for fisting dog, from Middle English fisting,
 at Oregon State University Oregon State University, at Corvallis; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1858 as Corvallis College, opened 1865. In 1868 it was designated Oregon's land-grant agricultural college and was taken over completely by the state in 1885.  in Corvallis and his colleagues examined 174 nearmature white sturgeon hauled in during sport fishing on various stretches of the Columbia River. Fish in one section had access to the ocean; the rest were separated from the ocean by dams. Sturgeon that never have access to the ocean still move upriver to spawn. In the December 2005 Environmental Health Perspectives, the team reports disturbing anomalies in some fish, especially those trapped within dammed segments of the river.

Blood from fish in the impounded stretches, especially from these behind the largest dam, tended to exhibit the highest concentrations of DDT DDT or 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1,1,-trichloroethane, chlorinated hydrocarbon compound used as an insecticide. First introduced during the 1940s, it killed insects that spread disease and feed on crops. , polychlorinated biphenyls, and other pollutants.

Immature females behind two smaller dams had much more vitellogenin Vitellogenin (Vg) (from latin vitellus = yolk and gener = to produce) is a synonymous term for the gene and the expressed protein. The molecule is classified as a glyco-lipo-protein, having properties of a sugar, fat and protein. , an egg-yolk protein, in their blood than the scientists had expected. Males, which normally have no vitellogenin, also showed measurable concentrations. Such an inappropriate feminization feminization /fem·i·ni·za·tion/ (fem?i-ni-za´shun)
1. the normal development of primary and secondary sex characters in females.

2. the induction or development of female secondary sex characters in the male.
 of males and young females has been witnessed in other fish species exposed to industrial, agricultural, and pharmaceutical pollutants (SN: 12/10/05, p. 381). Three sturgeon also carried both mature ovaries and mature testes testes
 or testicles

Male reproductive organs (see reproductive system). Humans have two oval-shaped testes 1.5–2 in. (4–5 cm) long that produce sperm and androgens (mainly testosterone), contained in a sac (scrotum) behind the penis.
, something that's never observed in normal fish.

Enzyme concentrations in the most-tainted fish indicated that their livers were fighting toxins in the animals' bodies. However, one

of the enzymes also breaks down male sex hormones. Feist told Science News that this would suggest that if the condition persists once the males reach maturity, they "won't be able to produce sperm."

Halfway across the continent, in polluted stretches of the Missouri and Mississippi rivers, Papoulias sees disturbing numbers of "major reproductive pathologies" in adult shovelnose sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus). Some males had testes full of sperm and also ovaries riddled with mature eggs. Some females' eggs were undergoing cell division although they hadn't been fertilized by sperm. A few females hosted tumors--ones likely triggered by inappropriate egg activation. Still other females were resorbing eggs, as the fish do when they're stressed or can't spawn.

Papoulias has unearthed Unearthed is the name of a Triple J project to find and "dig up" (hence the name) hidden talent in regional Australia.

Unearthed has had three incarnations - they first visited each region of Australia where Triple J had a transmitter - 41 regions in all.
 a handful of reports by other scientists chronicling similar impairments in the region's shovelnose sturgeon. "What's scary," she says, "is that the incidence of these changes appears to be rising." In the shovelnose shov·el·nose  
n.
A sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus platorhynchus) of the Mississippi River, having a broad flat snout. Also called hackleback, shovel-nosed sturgeon.
 species, 10 percent or more show major reproductive abnormalities.

She has described her findings to sturgeon researchers overseas. "My Russian colleagues don't even raise an eyebrow," she observes. "They say that they see reproductive abnormalities and tumors all of the time, usually in very polluted regions."

STURGEON PROSPECTS One might expect that the new caviar ban would immediately give sturgeon a respite from overfishing. However, many biologists are pessimistic.

Pikitch has worked with sturgeon-conservation programs in tentral Asia. She says that many sturgeon-exporting nations are too poor to police poaching, much less monitor the health of sturgeon stocks in a scientific manner.

Moreover, notes Morgan, some sturgeon hatchery-and-restocking programs are financed in part by taxes on caviar sales. "So, you could have a catch-22 situation" he says. Severely curtailed trade will dry up the money for restocking as poaching soars.

Another limitation on the ban's effectiveness is that illegally caught caviar might be branded as a farmed product, Morgan notes.

Eight years ago, Doukakis and her colleagues performed genetic tests on caviar purchased in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
. Somewhere between 25 and 30 percent of the time, caviar had been mislabeled mis·la·bel  
tr.v. mis·la·beled also mis·la·belled, mis·la·bel·ing also mis·la·bel·ling, mis·la·bels also mis·la·bels
To label inaccurately.

Adj. 1.
 with respect to species," she says. Sometimes, caviar of a highly endangered species was labeled as a species that was legal to capture.

What's more, wildlife inspector Sheila Einsweiler of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Arlington, Va., says that state officials are reporting an effect on U.S. sturgeons in response to CITES' pressure on the Caspian and Black Sea caviar trade. There's been an increase in the legal harvest of U.S. stocks, she says, as well as a boost in illegal catches.

"The United States is going to have to step up enforcement efforts to prevent pressures caused by the new ban," Pikitch says. However she adds, "we can't give up working directly in the Caspian and other exporting regions to ensure survival of their sturgeon in the wild."

"Clearly," she concludes, "we have to remain vigilant on all fronts."

ASSISTED REPRODUCTION--Ural River beluga beluga (bəl`gə) or white whale, small, toothed northern whale, Delphinapterus leucas. The beluga may reach a length of 19 ft (5.  and other sturgeon (left) were netted on a spawning run in Kazakhstan upstream of the Caspian Sea, and later released, Their eggs were fertilized by hand and the resulting fry raised in a hatchery until old enough (right) for restocking.

GENDER SURPRISE--At spawning time, the belly of a normal female shovelnose sturgeon (top) is full of black eggs. However, a growing share of males in polluted waters are hermaphrodites Hermaphrodites

half-man, half-woman; offspring of Hermes and Aphrodite. [Gk. Myth.: Hall, 153]

See : Androgyny
 (bottom), inappropriately bearing scores of eggs and testes (yellow) containing mature sperm.

PLUMMETING NUMBERS--Graph shows world catch of wild sturgeon peaking in late 1770s, then crashing precipitously. By 2000, within the total tonnage of harvested sturgeon, fanned sturgeon exceeded the reported wild catch.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Raloff, Janet
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Cover story
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 4, 2006
Words:2297
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