|
HOMECaptive breeding 'weakens' beasts By Richard Black Animals bred in captivity to help conservation programmes can quickly become less fit for survival in the wild, research suggests. US scientists found steelhead trout reared in hatcheries were much less good at reproducing than wild fish. Writing in the journal Science, they say the use of captive breeding needs careful re-consideration. "This study proves with no doubt that wild fish and hatchery fish are not the same, despite their appearances," said Michael Blouin of Oregon State University in Corvallis, US, who oversaw the research. Steelhead populations in rivers along the US west coast are listed as threatened or endangered by the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Captive breeding and release is one of the measures being used to safeguard numbers of a fish that is much prized by anglers. Captive loss The results were startling, with the first group about 40% less successful than the second. Hatchery programmes for steelhead and other salmonids (species within the salmon family) release more than five billion juvenile fish into Pacific waters each year. So if captive breeding does result in fish markedly less fit and less able to reproduce in the wild, the implications could be significant. Faults retained About one-third of all amphibian species are facing extinction, and the combination of virulent disease, habitat loss, pollution and climatic change means there is often little hope of conserving them in the wild; captive breeding and a re-introduction to the wild at some future point may be the only option. "A key question is whether the animals can re-adapt to the wild when you re-introduce them," he said. "If they can, this research suggests you still might need to breed more of them than we would have thought, because the reproduction rate in the earlier generations is going to be lower. "I think what it also implies is that you would want to make your re-introductions as soon as possible, rather than rearing generation after generation in captivity." Not all species would be likely to lose their reproductive fitness as quickly as the steelhead. But for those that do, the effectiveness of captive rearing and re-introduction as a survival strategy is now less assured; and relying on a continuing release of captive-reared individuals would prevent re-adaptation. Said Dr Lacy: "The other thing this emphasises is that you should do everything you can to stop them disappearing in the first place." |