The only catfish native to the Western U.S. is running out of water

UngulateNerd92

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I know that this article is from July of 2020, but still interesting and worthy of sharing here.

The only catfish native to the Western U.S. is running out of water

The Yaqui catfish was already going extinct. Then came the border wall.

In the spring of 2016, biologists at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service came to a terrible realization: The Yaqui catfish, the only catfish species native to the Western United States, was on the cusp of disappearing. After a week of searching, they could catch only two wild fish. They estimated that, at most, just 30 fish remained.

For approximately two decades, the last known Yaqui catfish in the United States had been kept in artificial ponds built in and around San Bernardino National Wildlife Refuge, on the Arizona-Sonora border, and at a local zoo. Creatures of rivers and wetlands, they had not reproduced. Still, federal and state biologists felt they had to try one more time. In a last-ditch breeding effort, the agency gathered 11 fish and shipped them to a hatchery in Kansas. Within weeks, all of them died. Eventually, even the one geriatric catfish left on display at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum had to be put down.

Today, the Yaqui catfish, a whiskery-looking creature that evolved at least 2 million years ago and was once common enough for people to catch for food, is functionally extinct in the United States. There may be a few still hidden in Arizona’s ponds, but not enough to keep a population alive. According to the Fish and Wildlife Service’s 2019 five-year review of the species, it’s on the brink of global extinction; even as the catfish faces ongoing threats in Mexico, scientists don’t know enough about its basic biology to save it.

The only catfish native to the Western U.S. is running out of water
 
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As far as I know, besides the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, another facility that kept Yaqui catfish (Ictalurus pricei) in captivity in the past was Uvalde National Fish Hatchery in Uvalde, Uvalde County, Texas. I found this out on my visit last year. Apperently they didn't do that well with them. I remember saying to a biologist there that I was of the belief that every wild animal and plant species, subspecies and distinct population segment when and where possible needs to have a captive/ex-situ insurance population and she said to me, understandably "Easier said than done." I just thought I would share that further piece of information about Yaqui catfish in captivity.
 
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Were the biologists able to discern why the animals did so poorly in captivity? This older article suggests why breeding failed but I'm curious if there's a reason they died so quickly. What a tremendous loss!

I remember saying to a biologist there that I was of the belief that every wild animal and plant species, subspecies and distinct population segment needs to have a captive/ex-situ insurance population and she said to me, understandably "Easier said than done."
This really encapsulates a lot of the discussion around wildlife conservation. That makes it a great anecdote in my book.
 
Were the biologists able to discern why the animals did so poorly in captivity? This older article suggests why breeding failed but I'm curious if there's a reason they died so quickly. What a tremendous loss!


This really encapsulates a lot of the discussion around wildlife conservation. That makes it a great anecdote in my book.

If that biologist did give me specific reasons, I don't remember them off the top of my head.

A great anecdote in your book? If you don't mind my asking, tell me more about that book via private message.
 
If that biologist did give me specific reasons, I don't remember them off the top of my head.

A great anecdote in your book? If you don't mind my asking, tell me more about that book via private message.
That was just another way to say 'in my opinion', though I certainly wish I had such a project to share. Someday!
 
If that biologist did give me specific reasons, I don't remember them off the top of my head.

A great anecdote in your book? If you don't mind my asking, tell me more about that book via private message.

I will say, since I posted this thread. I did inquire a bit further on this matter, and apperently the issues with keeping Yaqui catfish in captivity had something to do with the ability to maintain the correct water temperatures and chemical compounds or something of the like. When I see this person again, I'll ask her for more specific details and I'll take notes and share them. I actually do plan to write about the struggles with Yaqui catfish in captivity in the expanded and revised version of my book which is to be published this year.
 
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