Saturday, November 03, 2012

Threatened Fish Returned to NM Wilderness

Gila trout
After a few miles of sloshing around in metal containers on the backs of mules, the first batch of Gila trout has been safely returned to wilderness streams in southwestern New Mexico. The pack train will deliver another 3,000 of the federal protected fish deeper into the wilderness on Monday. The work marks the successful ending of a rescue mission that started more than four months ago, when the largest wildfire in New Mexico's recorded history was bearing down on Gila National Forest. Among the concerns at the time was the potential flooding of the forest's streams — home to the trout — with ash and charred debris. The trout were scooped up and ferried out of the wilderness via helicopter then trucked to a hatchery on the other end of the state for safe keeping. Since the fire, wildlife managers have been monitoring conditions across the Gila to see when the trout could be brought back. Tincher said the agency was able to use emergency funding to pay for the rescue and return.
Silvery Minnow
Meanwhile, along the Rio Grande in central New Mexico and West Texas, biologists are releasing hundreds of thousands of endangered Rio Grande silvery minnows. Around 100,000 have already been released at Big Bend National Park. Nearly 300,000 more will be released in New Mexico next week. Most of the minnows are coming from a national hatchery in southern New Mexico, where employees spent almost three weeks inserting small pink and yellow tags under the scales of each minnow so they can be tracked upon release. Recent surveys reflect the drought's toll on the minnow. Four of 20 monitoring sites along the Middle Rio Grande were dry in September, and minnows were found at only three of the remaining 16 sites, according to the Bureau of Reclamation...more

2 comments:

J.R. Absher said...

They hauled "several hundred" trout out and transported them to a Northern New Mexico facility at a cost of how much? Now, they're returning? 3,000. Sounds like it's simple restocking--and the so-called "rescue" probably cost us ten of thousands...

Wish I had the time to investigate this more.

Frank DuBois said...

Similar questions were swirling around in my mind as I posted this.

Wish you had the time too.