FANTASTIC NEWS!
A major engineering project
helping salmon return to what was once one of Britain’s most polluted river
systems, has achieved a historic success after a young salmon was
discovered in the River Dearne, South Yorkshire.
An Environment
Agency fish survey team spotted the 14cm juvenile when carrying out routine
checks last week. The discovery is the first evidence of salmon spawning in the
river, which is a tributary of the River Don, for more than 150 years.
Once in
abundance, salmon populations began to dwindle with the growth of industry.
Weirs which were built to power industry or provide deep water for boats also
acted as barriers to the fish reaching their spawning grounds. By the mid 19th Century
salmon were all but gone from South Yorkshire’s rivers.
Last year
the construction of a fish pass was completed at Sprotbrough Weir opening up 55
kilometres of the River Don - almost half the length of the river - to salmon
and other migratory fish.
Jerome Masters,
Environment Agency fisheries technical officer said; “Our rivers are the
healthiest for more than 20 years and otters, salmon and other wildlife are
returning for the first time since the industrial revolution. But there is
still more to be done. The construction of the fish pass at Sprotbrough Weir is
a significant step in getting salmon
back to rivers across South Yorkshire.
“The River
Don already supports a healthy population of coarse fish, and adult salmon have
been caught in the river in the recent past, but the discovery of this juvenile
salmon in the River Dearne is hugely exciting. The size of the fish indicates
that it was born in early 2014, which means that its parents probably used the
fish pass at Sprotbrough Weir shortly after it opened.”
The fish pass at Sprotbrough
also allows coarse fish living downstream of the weir, like barbel, to reach
their spawning grounds further upstream. It reconnects the rivers Don and
Dearne back with the Humber Estuary and is part of
our grander plan to create ‘fish highways’ providing free passage for fish
between the sea and the upper reaches of rivers.
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