Scientists discover whitebait can climb ropes
MEDIA RELEASE
15 May 2009
Scientists discover whitebait can climb ropes
In what is believed to be a New Zealand first, Environment Waikato scientists may have found a clever way to overcome resource consent barriers for farmers – and possibly help to save some of New Zealand’s threatened native fish species.
Tiny fish climbing ropes – it might sound like a crazy idea from a Dr Seuss book, but it’s actually a real-life experiment being carried out by Environment Waikato scientists.
The scientists, Bruno David, Kevin Collier and Mark Hamer, have discovered juvenile banded kokopu, a native whitebait species, can climb up a special type of polypropylene rope.
Now they are conducting field trials to see if the fish can do the same thing in the natural environment and use their “climbing skills” to wriggle up ropes threaded through perched culverts.
Culverts are large pipes that allow water to pass underneath roads and farm tracks. “Perched” culverts hang above water level, blocking fish migration through rivers and streams.
“Fish need to be able to migrate up rivers as part of their life cycle so they can reach suitable adult breeding habitats,” Dr David said.
“Unfortunately, even well installed culverts can end up blocking fish passage over time, because the water rushing through erodes away the land away the end of the culvert. This can leave the culvert hanging above the stream, creating a drop that fish just can’t get past.”
This, along with habitat loss and substantial recreational harvesting nationally, was probably why reported whitebait catches had been steadily declining in the Waikato from an estimated average of 46 tonnes per year in the 1930s to around only three tonnes per year today, he said.
The scientists’rope-climbing idea uses the knowledge that some native New Zealand fish species from hilly or steep river habitats are equipped with “their own version of four-wheel drive”.
“Some juvenile native fish have this unique ability to climb by flattening out their bodies and wriggling up using their heads and fins,” Dr David said.
“But even four-wheel drive can’t get them past a manmade structure like a perched culvert – to do that they’d have to climb upside down to negotiate the overhang, basically defying gravity.
“We’re hoping the rope could help them climb up to the culvert entrance and get past the lip.
“Providing fish access through just one culvert could open up kilometres of habitat upstream.”
Dr David said the rope could be an extremely cost effective way of retrofitting culverts to allow fish passage, eliminating the need for expensive engineered structures like fish ladders, which could cost tens of thousands of dollars.
Photos and audio clips on our
website, plus a video clip that shows a fish moving along
the rope.
To download them just click on this link and
scroll to the bottom of the media release:
http://www.ew.govt.nz/News-and-events/Media-releases/Scientists-discover-whitebait-can-climb-ropes/
(Additional background information follows.)
Additional information for journalists
Pohutukawa inspiration
Dr David and Dr
Collier came up with the rope idea while working in the
field in 2007.
“We found a waterfall where roots were
coming out of a big pohutukawa tree and growing over a big
rock wall, down through the water,” Dr David
said.
“When we peeled the roots open we found a whole
lot of little eels and banded kokopu inside. We’d seen
fish climbing rock walls before but we’d never seen them
climbing up roots and we thought this might be a solution to
the perched culvert problem, where we could use ropes rather
than building expensive engineered structures like fish
ladders.”
Early experiments successful
The scientists
have already tested their idea using a replica culvert set
up in an Environment Waikato laboratory last November. They
used banded kokopu – one of five different native fish
species that can make up a whitebait catch – captured
during last year’s whitebait run.
For the experiment,
they sourced a special kind of polypropylene rope used by
the aquaculture industry to grow mussel spat. The durable
furry ropes have loops and strands that fish leverage off as
they wriggle up.
The trial worked, showing the juvenile
fish could easily shimmy up half a metre of rope (the
average height of a Waikato perched culvert) and use it to
get through the replica culvert.
Field experiments underway
Experiments in the field have just got
underway.
Two weeks ago the scientists installed ropes in
a perched culvert believed to be blocking eel passage into
Lake Harihari, south of Kawhia, and last week they installed
the rope in a culvert that is blocking fish migration
through a Coromandel stream.
They are hoping to improve
fish passage for a range of “climbing” whitebait
species, including koaro and the threatened giant and
shortjaw kokopu. The rope should also work for juvenile
redfin bullies, shortfin and longfin eels.
“The giant
and shortjaw kokopu are as important as the kiwi or the
kakapo, because they’re endemic to this country,” Dr
David said.
“They’re not found anywhere else in the
world.”
Big benefits for farmers
Even though the
Resource Management Act requires all stream structures to
allow fish passage, Dr David estimates there are possibly
hundreds of perched culverts restricting fish passage across
the Waikato region, many on farms.
Fish ladders
–engineered structures – can be retrofitted to culverts
to help fish migrate through, but these can be very
expensive, involving expert input from biologists, engineers
and other consultants.
If the rope idea works, it could
be a cost-effective alternative to fish ladders in steep
catchments where native climbing species are found, saving
money for farmers, roading companies, councils and private
land owners.
Scientific first
Dr David believes the
technique could be a scientific first.
“I’ve looked
long and hard and I can’t find any published documentation
on the use of ropes to provide fish passage. I’ve heard a
few anecdotes but I’ve never seen the technique in
use.
“A similar approach using a tube with bristles
inside has been used for enabling eel migration past some
structures but the benefits of the rope are that it also
provides structure inside the culvert pipe itself, rather
than simply being a pathway to the pipe.”
Did you
know?
Although the majority of whitebait is made up of
inanga, a non-threatened native species, some species in the
catch may include the threatened shortjaw and giant kokopu
– so many New Zealanders have probably consumed threatened
native species while eating their whitebait patties without
even realising it.
What is Environment
Waikato?
Environment Waikato is the regional council for
the Waikato region.
The council’s area extends from the
Bombay Hills in the north to Mt Ruapehu in the south, and
from the mouth of the Waikato River to Mokau on the west
coast, across to the Coromandel Peninsula on the
east.
The region contains nationally important
electricity generation facilities and an internationally
significant dairy sector. It is also home to iconic natural
features which are key tourist attractions.
Environment
Waikato’s responsibilities include:
•
sustainable management of natural and physical resources,
including pest control.
• planning regional
growth and transport, and providing bus services.
•
civil defence, emergency response, navigation safety, dam
safety, flood management, erosion control and road
safety.
ENDS