Nathaniel Ng: SHOAL / IUCN SSC ASAP Southeast Asia Programme Coordinator

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Nathaniel Ng: SHOAL / IUCN SSC ASAP Southeast Asia Programme Coordinator

Nathaniel Ng has joined the SHOAL team as the Southeast Asia Programme Coordinator alongside SHOAL partners IUCN SSC ASAP. He is a conservation biologist by training, with research background in population and conservation genomics and, in the years since his doctorate, has focused his efforts on the protection of life under the water’s surface, taking on aquatic-focused roles in conservation and research management in Mandai Nature, SEA Aquarium, and Mandai Wildlife Reserves, while freelancing in environmental consultation.

What’s your background?

Nathaniel: I am a conservation biologist with research specialisation in phylogenomics and population genomics and molecular ecology. I am fortunate to have enjoyed a diverse and multidisciplinary academic background, from sexual selection in insects, to Masters work in environmental science and management, on to PhD work focused on the patterns and mechanisms driving avian diversification across islands. Since completing my postgraduate degrees, I have turned my attention to freshwater fish conservation, accruing experience in conservation management and planning in the contexts of both NGOs (Mandai Nature) and zoos and aquaria (SEA Aquarium, Mandai Wildlife Group).

Where do you live?

Nathaniel: I presently live in Singapore.

What most excites you about working with SHOAL?

Nathaniel: Having worked on SHOAL/ASAP’s Strategic Framework to accelerate urgent action for Southeast Asia’s Critically Endangered freshwater fish in the past, what excites me the most is the opportunity to personally witness and help drive the protection of these oft-ignored but critical species. I am also enthusiastic about exploring the potential of roping in the expertise and interests of home hobbyists and zoos and aquaria, which could provide targeted and significant contributions to the protection of freshwater fishes.

What will your role on the team be?

Nathaniel: As the Southeast Asia Programme Coordinator, I will be managing and coordinating SHOAL’s efforts in Southeast Asia, working closely with a wide range of conservation partners (governments, scientists, communities, NGOs) with a focus on Critically Endangered species.

Gunung Halimun, Java

What do you find most interesting about freshwater species conservation?

Nathaniel: What makes freshwater species conservation challenging is also what makes it interesting: ever-growing human usage and extraction coupled with the fragility of freshwater ecosystems means that much innovation and persistence will be required to drive meaningful change. No two conservation challenges are ever going to be the same – which makes for a professional journey that is ever changing and never boring!

Do you have a favourite fish?

Nathaniel: This is too difficult of a question to answer! If I was forced to choose – maybe Parosphromenus tweediei. There’s just something about those stripes.

Nathaniel, welcome to the team!

Parosphromenus tweediei
Parosphromenus tweediei

Chouly Ou: SHOAL US Conservation Coordinator

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What’s your background?

Chouly: I am an interdisciplinary conservation scientist with expertise in freshwater fish ecology, community-based conservation, and capacity development. I have worked extensively in Cambodia’s Tonle Sap Lake and the Lower Mekong River Basin, conducting research and leading conservation efforts. Throughout my career, I have held roles at the School for Field Studies-Cambodia programme, WWF-US, and BirdLife International, where I taught and researched freshwater fish ecology and conservation, managing grants, and developing local capacity.

Where do you live?

Chouly: I currently live in Virginia, United States of America, though I am originally from Cambodia.

What drew you to working with SHOAL?

Chouly: I was drawn to working with SHOAL because of its strong focus on conserving globally threatened freshwater fish species, a critical yet overlooked taxon. This role perfectly aligns with my passion and mission to make an impact on freshwater fish species and their ecosystems at the global level.

What excites you about freshwater species conservation?

Chouly: Growing up in Cambodia, where fish and freshwater ecosystems are integral to our lives and culture, I experienced firsthand the vital role of the rich diversity of fish species and their ecosystems, like the Tonle Sap Lake and Mekong River. Unfortunately, I also witnessed these fish and these systems’ increasing threats that often go unnoticed and lack the urgent attention they deserve. Seeing the incredible biodiversity and the growing threats facing them has motivated me to advocate for the conservation of freshwater species and their habitats.

What are you most looking forward to with this role?

Chouly: I am most looking forward to collaborating with communities, scientists, governments, NGOs, and private corporations to co-create long-term solutions for the recovery of the many globally threatened freshwater fish species and their ecosystems.

Do you have a favourite fish?

Chouly: It’s hard to choose, but I have a special connection to Schistura diminuta, the loach species I discovered during my Ph.D. research in Northeast Cambodia. It reminds me of how many species have yet to be discovered, yet they could become extinct before we get to know them if we do not work together to bring about conservation actions for freshwater fish species.

Chouly, a warm welcome to the team!

Chouly at work on Tonlé Sap.

Cycling for sturgeon: 11,000km across Eurasia

Matthew Spencer

Cycling for sturgeon: 11,000km across Europe. An interview with Matt Spencer

Matthew Spencer recently left his job as the UK Fisheries Outreach Officer at the Marine Stewardship Council to follow a dream he hatched during lockdown: to cycle across Eurasia to raise awareness of sturgeon declines. As the most endangered group of species on the planet, sturgeon populations have plummeted in the last century, and time is now running out to save them.

SHOAL caught up with him to learn more about his motives and ambitions for this amazing project.

11,000km is a long way! What made you take on this adventure? 

The past two years have been difficult for people everywhere around the world. During lockdown, I was stuck in a small South London flat with a large world map behind my computer. In meetings, I would look at the map, scanning for the last rivers I knew that still had sturgeon swimming in them. This slowly morphed into a deep desire to actually visit these places whilst there was still sturgeon left. And so from this, an adventure was born.

Sturgeon are the world’s most endangered group of species and if we don’t change the way we treat their home rivers, we will witness the end of many sturgeon species in our lifetimes. My project will just be a drop in the ocean for what’s needed, but if enough people contributed in some way, meaningful results can be made.

The world is changing at an ever-increasing rate and, despite the great work that’s being done to fix problems, things still look bad for the environment. The idea of cycling for sturgeon evolved from a desire to support sturgeon in whatever way I could, whilst being able to explore the world before it changes.

Matthew Spencer © Matthew Spencer

Tell us a bit about your personal background, and why you are focusing this adventure on sturgeon. 

When I came out of university, I found that all the jobs I was interested in asked that the candidates have a high level of prior experience – even entry level jobs. This obviously makes it really difficult to get a foot on the ladder in such a competitive sector. It was by sheer chance that I managed to gain some invaluable experience: I sent an email to Flora and Fauna International and, fortunately for me, somebody was prepared to take me on as an intern on a project looking to protect sturgeon in the Rioni River.

Sturgeon represent more to me than just species that I am fond of; they represent a first foray into conservation, and a moment where I understood what I wanted to do as a ‘career’ . They gave me an opportunity to make a mark on the world and try to make a positive difference.

My time spent chasing sturgeon in Georgia was a time of huge personal development, which opened my eyes to the human aspect of conservation and the mosaic of different cultures and communities that can exist along a river. From a village where the national language had yet to reach, to another town where poachers hid in plain sight, no two people or places were alike. This is important to bear in mind when what you are trying to achieve might impact others. The old saying goes, ‘fisheries management is people management, nothing to do with the fish’ … and I would imagine this logic applies to more than just fish.

What’s the route?

The route is based on specific rivers, meaning that it will be an unusual route that will hopefully throw me into some of the last wild places in Europe and Asia. The Garonne in France is first up, before crossing the Alps and following the River Po across Italy.

After this I will follow the Danube for several hundred miles to its Delta and cross the Black Sea to revisit old stomping grounds in the Rioni basin, before crossing Azerbaijan and catching a ferry across to Kazakhstan. I plan to finish in Tashkent after visiting the Syr Darya and conducting interviews with fishers to see if I can help with rediscovering the Syr Darya shovelnose sturgeon.

I’m excited by each of the countries, and it will be interesting to see the shifting cultural norms between them. I’m sure each of the countries will bring their own challenges, but they will be offset by the adventures there.

I have had to change the route already: I was planning on going through Ukraine, but of course that’s had to change due to the war there. I will also need to be cognisant of what it means to be a British person in some of the countries, particularly some of the ‘Stans’ – some of their economies are closely tied to the Russian economy and are suffering as a result.

Locals in Romania who offered to buy Matt a beer and put him up for the night © Matthew Spencer

Off roading in southern Hungary following the Drava river © Matthew Spencer

What are your plans when you visit sturgeon spawning sites? 

I’ll be visiting restocking and breeding facilities, joining anti-poaching controls on the Rioni River in Georgia, and meeting experts in as many countries as I can. I hope to shine a light on the local communities, NGOs and government bodies that are helping the sturgeon in some way.

Which sturgeon-related organisations will you be meeting with along the way? 

INRAE in France, Aquaculture centres such as Storione Ticino in Italy, WWF in Romania and Bulgaria, and FFI in Georgia, all the while being supported by the World Sturgeon Conservation Society and their network along the way.

What will people’s donations help to achieve? 

I am fundraising for Fauna and Flora International’s Caucasus sturgeon programme: all money raised will go towards increasing the protection of sturgeon in the Eastern Black Sea. Funding will be used to help fund Georgian masters and PhD research projects on sturgeon, further develop the fisher-eNGO network that has been built up and which is already reaping huge rewards, and lastly to support another survey of adjacent rivers to see if sturgeon are not just limited to the Rioni.

Sunset on the Danube looking out towards Bulgaria.  © Matthew Spencer

Camping near the Danube delta © Matthew Spencer

How long do you think this adventure will take?

I started on April 6th, and plan to return in the first week of October. There is a myriad of issues ongoing globally, so I am trying to be flexible and realistic as I travel. The snows in the Central Asian highlands, and the closed roads they’ll bring about, will likely be a natural indicator of when I should be heading back home.

How can people get involved?

Glad you asked. The whole premise of this expedition is to raise awareness of sturgeon. Without knowledge of something, you are unlikely to want to protect it, so I am trying to bring the news of their sorry demise into as many people’s orbits as possible.

I am running a blog as I travel, highlighting the work being done and organisations I have met, as well as illuminating what solo adventure travel can be like – both the highs and the lows!

You can find more info on the trip and can track my progress on the expedition’s website: www.oneaveragespoke.org

Or follow me on Instagram one.average.spoke

Thanks to groups like SHOAL, I hope to make whatever impact I can and galvanise support and greater funding for sturgeon and freshwater conservation projects.

You can help Matt’s fundraising efforts at the link below. Proceeds go to Fauna & Flora International’s Caucasus sturgeon programme.

justgiving.com/fundraising/oneaveragespoke

The dramatic Gorges du Tarn in southern France © Matthew Spencer

Assessing the extinction risk of all species of freshwater fishes globally

Bagarius vegrandi © Nonn Panitvong.jpg

Assessing the extinction risk of all species of freshwater fishes globally: an interview with Catherine Sayer

Catherine Sayer is the Freshwater Programme Officer in the IUCN Biodiversity Assessment and Knowledge Team, based at The David Attenborough Building in Cambridge, UK. She is currently working to get the extinction risk of all species of freshwater fishes globally assessed for the IUCN Red List, which will fill in knowledge gaps on which regions have the highest numbers and proportions of threatened freshwater fishes, giving a greater understanding of where conservation programmes are likely to have most impact.

SHOAL caught up with her to learn more about the IUCN Red List assessment process and get some advice on how researchers and taxonomists can conduct Red List assessments themselves.

Tell us a bit about your background and your current role. And what led you to do what you do now?

I have been working for IUCN since 2014 based in Cambridge, UK in the (recently renamed) Biodiversity Assessment and Knowledge Team, part of the IUCN Centre for Science and Data. I was initially part of the Red List Unit, but since 2016 have been focussing on freshwater biodiversity, now with the role of Programme Officer.

My background is quite broad, with an undergraduate degree in Natural Sciences (Zoology) and an MSc in Ecology, Evolution and Conservation, but over the last few years I’ve become much more familiar with the fascinating and often overlooked world of freshwater! At present, my work primarily focusses on increasing the representation of freshwater species on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™, through assessment of species of freshwater decapods (crabs, crayfishes, and shrimps), fishes, molluscs, odonates (dragonflies and damselflies), and aquatic plants. This is important given the unprecedented level of threat to the freshwater realm, which is incredibly species rich (supporting over 10% of all known species and 30% of vertebrates, despite covering less than 1% of the Earth’s surface), and of great value to human livelihoods in terms of ecosystem services.

Catherine Sayer © Catherine Sayer
Catherine Sayer © Catherine Sayer

You have recently done a gap analysis to see which species still need to be assessed for the Red List. What does this involve?

IUCN is working to complete a global assessment of all freshwater fish species for the IUCN Red List, and I recently completed a gap analysis to identify which freshwater fish species still need to be assessed. To do this I compared a list of all described freshwater fish species from Eschmeyer’s Catalog of Fishes, which is the standard taxonomic source for fishes on the Red List, to a list of all species with assessments published on the IUCN Red List, or under way through ongoing projects. The resulting list (after accounting for quite a few taxonomic discrepancies and changes!) includes all “gap species” of freshwater fish that still need to have Red List assessments completed. Many of these species are those that are relatively new to science, having been recently described, such that our target list is growing as researchers and taxonomists identify and describe more species!

And what does a Red List assessment involve?

An IUCN Red List assessment tells us the relative extinction risk of a species. Each assessment includes an account with information on the distribution (including a distribution map), population, habitats and ecology, use and trade, threats, and conservation and research actions relevant to the species. This information is then used to assign species to a category of extinction risk based on data driven and objective criteria. The criteria are designed to identify species at higher relative risk of extinction based on their population size, population trend, or geographic range, together with information on threats acting on the species. Species assessed as Vulnerable (VU), Endangered (EN), or Critically Endangered (CR) are described as threatened. However, the Red List isn’t just limited to those species at high risk of extinction – it includes information on all species that have been assessed against the categories and criteria, including those assessed as Least Concern (LC) and considered to be at low relative risk of extinction, for example.

We work with species experts and conservation scientists to draft Red List assessments based on the best available knowledge at the time of assessment. Anyone with knowledge of the global population of a species can be an assessor, but in practice most assessments are drafted by members of the IUCN Species Survival Commission (SSC) Specialist Groups. Once drafted, assessments are reviewed by independent experts to ensure the data presented are correct and complete. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, these first steps (drafting and review) often took place in workshops where we gathered species experts to assess the freshwater species native to a particular region and/or taxonomic group, but at present assessments are completed remotely by individuals or groups of experts collaborating online. Once reviewed, assessments are submitted to the IUCN Red List Unit in Cambridge, UK for final consistency checks before being published on the IUCN Red List website, which is recognised as an online scientific journal.

Once published, IUCN Red List data are available for many uses by a number of sectors: education and public awareness, scientific analyses, influencing conservation policy, informing conservation planning and priority setting, assisting with private sector decision making, and more. To search for a species on the IUCN Red List, simply enter its scientific or common name into the search bar at the top of the website. If the species has been assessed for the Red List, you will be taken to its species account.

Workshop group photo © Catherine Sayer
Participants of the Sunda Basin Freshwater Fishes Red List Review Workshop held at Wildlife Reserves Singapore, Singapore in January 2019. © Catherine Sayer
Screenshot of IUCN Red List assessment
Screenshot of IUCN Red List assessment

Approximately how many freshwater fish species are assessed each year?

On the current version of the Red List (version 2021-3), there are assessments of 11,291 species of freshwater fish, representing over 60% of all described freshwater fish species. This total is the result of over 20 years of Red Listing work, but efforts and number of species assessed have greatly increased in recent years with support of initiatives such as the IUCN–Toyota Partnership, which have enabled us to increase the geographic coverage of the Red List with respect to freshwater fishes. In 2020, assessments of close to 1,800 freshwater fish species were published, primarily from the Sunda Basin and New Guinea, and in 2021, assessments of over 900 freshwater fish species were published, including species from Brazil, the Caribbean, and the Philippines. This year, we are hoping for many more species to be published, the majority of which will be native to South America.

And approximately what percentage of these are threatened with extinction?

Of the freshwater fish species assessed for the Red List so far, a best estimate of 30% are considered to be threatened with extinction, meaning they are assessed as Vulnerable (VU), Endangered (EN), or Critically Endangered (CR). This estimate isn’t yet based on complete data (given all freshwater fishes haven’t yet been assessed for the Red List), but indicates a higher percentage threatened with extinction than for birds, reptiles, and mammals, all of which have been assessed. Of the threatened freshwater fish species, 636 (6% of the total) are assessed as CR, and 943 (8%) are assessed as EN. It’s also important to note that a high proportion (21%) of the freshwater fish species assessed so far have been categorised as Data Deficient (DD). This means that there is insufficient information available to indicate their relative extinction risk, bringing some uncertainty into these estimates.

Nothobranchius elucens © Béla Nagy
Nothobranchius elucens was described by Béla Nagy in 2021, and assessed for the Red List by Nagy and Watters in the same year as Vulnerable based on its restricted geographic range. © Béla Nagy
Bagarius vegrandi © Nonn Panitvong.jpg
Bagarius vegrandis was described by Ng & Kottelat in 2021. An assessment of the species completed by Ng has been submitted to the IUCN Red List Unit for publication. © Nonn Panitvong

Shoal are keen to encourage researchers and taxonomists to conduct Red List assessments when they discover and describe new species. Can you offer any advice on how they can best do this?

I am also keen to encourage researchers and taxonomists to assess species for the IUCN Red List after describing them! I work with a handful of species experts that do this already, but would welcome if this practice became more widespread. Lots of the information that is provided as part of the description of a species is also relevant to a Red List assessment, for example the known distribution and habitats of the species. Additionally, those involved in the discovery and collection of a species are generally familiar with activities occurring in the distribution of the species that might be observed to (or can be inferred to based on knowledge of similar species) have negative effects on the species, therefore representing known or potential threats. Together, this provides a good basis for a Red List assessment.

Some taxonomic descriptions already contain sections on the conservation status of a species, but these don’t constitute an official Red List assessment – Red List assessments are only official once they have been through the full IUCN Red List assessment process and been published on the IUCN Red List website. This is to ensure that the IUCN Red List categories and criteria have been applied correctly and consistently. Although not always the case, many recently described species are assessed as either Data Deficient (DD) or threatened, given they are often relatively poorly known or occur in poorly known areas, and may be rare or have highly restricted distributions.

For any researchers interested to assess their newly described freshwater fish species for the Red List (or any species for which they have the relevant knowledge), I would advise that they contact me and I will be able to guide them through the Red List assessment process. Alternatively, there are lots of helpful resources available via the Red List website, including a free online Red List training course.

Paratrygon orinocensis

Paratrygon orinocensis was described by Loboda, Lasso, Rosa & Carvalho in 2021. The species is currently being assessed for the Red List by the IUCN SSC Shark Specialist Group. © LOBODA, LASSO, ROSA & DE CARVALHO

Describing new species: an interview with Ralf Britz

Ralf Britz collecting in Myanmar © Ralf Britz

Dr. Ralf Britz is a leading ichthyologist and taxonomist, and Head of the Ichthyology Section at Senckenberg World of Biodiversity. He has been involved in a total of 73 species descriptions and has been a key team member in the discovery of seven species which needed the creation of new genera. He was also the lead author on two papers describing the Gollum snakehead Aenigmachanna gollum: a new species in a new genus in an entirely new family.

With Shoal’s release of a landmark New Species 2021 report tomorrow, we caught up with Ralf to get the low-down on what discovering and describing new species really means.

What does it mean to describe a species, and how is it done?

When you describe a new species scientifically this process is often referred to among the public as having identified a new species. The process starts with the impression that you have found a species that does not have a scientific name, i.e. it is unknown scientifically. You then need to compare your specimens of what you think may be a new species with specimens of similar species that already have a name.

As taxonomy is one of the oldest scientific biological disciplines, this can be quite a cumbersome process, because you have to deal with all the species descriptions since and including Linnaeus’ 10th edition of his Systema naturae, published in 1758 and the starting point of animal taxonomy. If you are lucky and the group you work on has only a few species, then it is easy to compare your material with already collected material of the other species. This usually involves comparison with what we call type specimens, the specimens used to describe species. One of these type specimens is chosen as the holotype, the actual name bearer, the one specimen that is permanently linked to that name. These are stored ideally in publicly accessible museum collections. If, after comparison, you find that the specimens of what you thought were a new species are identical to one of the already described ones, then that is the end of the story. But if you find consistent and significant differences to all the known species in the group you are studying then you have probably found a new species.

The next step is then to write up a scientific manuscript in which you detail how your new species differs from already described (named) species, and you propose a name for it. The name may refer to a characteristic feature of the new species, or the place where it was collected, or it may honour a person, such as the person who collected it, an influential colleague or someone who supported your work.

In most cases the new name concerns just the new species. But sometimes you find an organism that you cannot easily fit into a larger group of similar and closely related species, a group we call a genus. In this case you may need to create a new genus for this new species. Here, the same rules apply you need to check all genera (plural of genus) in the larger group of organisms (a group we call a family). If you find you cannot fit it into one of the known genera, you can describe a new genus.

Once you have written up your findings relating to a new species or new genus, you submit your manuscript to a scientific journal for peer review. This means the manuscript is sent to other experts in the field who read your manuscript and point out potential problems, errors, mistakes etc. They provide the quality check before a manuscript is accepted and then published. They may ask you to revise your manuscript, check sources you may have overlooked, ask for additional details, or if you have made some major mistakes, suggest to reject your manuscript. If you have done your job, though, it may need no or just minor revision and will then get accepted for publication. Once it is published by a scientific journal and you have made sure you followed all the necessary steps that are required by the Code of Zoological Nomenclature – a set of rules that determine what has to be done for a name to be published in a valid way – then the new species is officially described and carries the name you have chosen.

I want to briefly touch on a worrying aspect of species descriptions that has started to plague taxonomy: the unholy alliance between self-proclaimed taxonomists and journals that will publish anything of any quality if you pay for it, the so-called predatory journals. There is an increasing number of manuscripts getting published which did not go through the strict and necessary step of peer review. Publication of these poor-quality species descriptions is a problem, because you cannot just ignore them as in other areas of science where poor papers just disappear in the garbage dump of scientific publications. Even poor-quality papers that describe new species will need to be considered due to the specific rules of nomenclature that need to be applied. Showing that these manuscripts are poor quality, and that the so-called new species is actually not new often involves so much more work, effort, time and money from you than the person invested who wrote the poor-quality manuscript. I know of cases in which one person described more than 20 new species from a well-known area of the world, all in predatory journals and with not a single of these so called new species really being new. Imagine that for each of these 20 or so new species you need to demonstrate that the original paper describing them is of poor quality and that these are not new species. This means you waste precious time, in which you could have described 20 new species with the level of quality that is necessary and is guaranteed by a proper peer review. Such taxonomic vandalism, as it has been termed, hampers the discovery of new species in a time when diversity is disappearing at an alarming rate.

Cyanogaster noctivaga
Cyanogaster noctivaga © Ralf Britz

Are there any species descriptions you’ve been involved with that you found particularly memorable or noteworthy?

Oh yes, absolutely. I have a soft spot for the weird and wonderful. I was involved in the description of Paedocypris progenetica, the smallest fish and vertebrate species. Then Danionella dracula, an equally tiny relative of D. cerebrum. But D. dracula has impressive large fangs. Then there was a new species and genus of earthworm eel from Myanmar, which I named after my daughter, Pillaiabrachia siniae. And during night collecting in the Rio Negro in the Amazon basin we found a new brilliantly blue coloured little fish, the blue bellied night wanderer, as we named it, Cyanogaster noctivaga. But the most memorable is Aenigmachanna gollum. When I first saw a photo shared on social media and sent to me by my colleague Rajeev Raghavan from Kochi, my heart stopped, as I had no idea what kind of fish I was looking at. Well, it ended up in a genus and family of its own.

Danionella dracula female © Ralf Britz
Danionella dracula female © Erwin Schraml
Pillaiabrachia siniae © Ralf Britz
Pillaiabrachia siniae © Ralf Britz

212 new freshwater fish species sounds like a lot in one year. What does this level of discovery tell us about the extent of what remains unknown in the planet’s freshwaters?

It sounds like a lot, but this has been the general trend of freshwater species discovery over the last few decades. There are still large parts of our planet that have not been explored and we keep discovering new animals that we had no idea existed. Finding a new species of an already established genus is exciting, but discovering entirely unknown lineages of higher taxonomic categories still today teaches us how much we do not know. And then keep in mind that only a tiny, tiny fraction of earth’s water volume, just around 0.03%, is freshwater in lakes and rivers and habitable for fishes. And yet, we have all this incredible diversity there. Mindboggling.

What is it about freshwater that leads to such incredible biodiversity?

I would say it is the more local situation and more diverse habitats that you get in freshwaters: you have river basins that are separated by land from other basins. There species evolve that are endemic to this river basin. Then you have ecological separations of river mouths from lowland parts of the rivers, separation of these from the more mountainous faster flowing parts of rivers and finally the rapidly flowing headwaters. This leads to endemism in different parts of the same river. These different parts of the same river will not only differ in the velocity of the water but also in the water temperature, amount of dissolved oxygen, pH, conductivity. Imagine that you have this basically in every major river.

Add this to the fact that through geological events over millions of years you have separations of parts of rivers and reunion of others, so there is a multitude of habitats changing over time and often very restricted endemisms.

All of these factors together act as species pumps that are obviously working much faster than in the oceans.

Ralf collecting in the Rio Negro © Ralf Britz
Ralf collecting in the Rio Negro © Manuela Marinho

Why is it important to discover and describe new species?

There are many different aspects to this question. One is this: if we consider the entire picture of lifeforms that evolution has produced on our planet, then we would miss many pieces of a complex puzzle if we stopped exploring. Think of the painting of Mona Lisa with hundreds of thousands of holes in it. You would not want to look at that.

Understanding diversity may also enable us to better understand how this diversity interacts. Something may seem insignificant but is sometimes of the greatest importance. Just think of invasive species, pests of crops, indicator species that help you evaluate the quality of a habitat and our environment. New species may become important in research: just think of the zebrafish discovered back in 1822 but also Danionella cerebrum only described last year. New species are pieces of the evolutionary puzzle we did not know existed and because of that we had no idea what they may have to offer.

Do you think it is important for people to care that new species are still being discovered and described? Why?

My experience is that people are generally excited when you tell them about new species discoveries. To imagine there is still so much out there that is unknown to us is a fascinating thought.

It is also more urgent than ever that we go out and discover, as the diversity is disappearing fast. Just think of the image of Mona Lisa with the hundreds of thousands of holes. Would

it not make you sad to know that these will never be filled as the species disappeared before we identified them?

What can we hope to learn from new species discoveries and descriptions?

The most important part we can learn is that there are so many fascinating organisms out there that we have not even discovered. Sometimes it is a new species that looks very much like one we already know, but often we discover a true gem, something unimaginable, unexpected, something we would have bet money does not exist. And these are special moments when you sit there quietly in awe of the evolutionary diversity our planet has produced.

Is there anything you would like to add?

Taxonomy, discovering, describing and understanding the evolutionary diversity that surrounds us to me is one of the most satisfying parts of my life. I would never trade it for anything else.

Danionella dracula scanning electron microscope image © Ralf Britz
Danionella dracula scanning electron microscope image © Ralf Britz

Why freshwater fish need as much – or more – attention than rhinos

© Veronika Perkova

Why freshwater fish need as much – or more – attention than rhinos

Shoal executive director Mike Baltzer, conservation biologist and leader of the IUCN SSC Asian Species Action Partnership Nerissa Chao, and fish conservation expert Nathaniel Ng Shengrong appeared on Veronika Perkova’s Nature Solutionaries podcast to discuss fish conservation, and:

  • Why freshwater fish are important for the ecosystem
  • What happens when fish go extinct
  • Why fish are neglected and overlooked
  • How the ASAP Action Plan will help protect fish in Southeast Asia
  • How local communities, hobbyists and governments can help
  • Successful fish conservation initiatives

Head over to Veronika’s website here to listen to the podcast and check out some of Veronika’s fantastic wildlife art, or click the link below 👇

It’s time to stop trash-talking fish

Matthew L. Miller with a longnose gar caught fly fishing

It’s time to stop trash-talking fish

by Michael Edmondstone

Matthew L. Miller is the director of science communications at The Nature Conservancy. He is also a passionate angler whose love of freshwater biodiversity calls him to question traditional approaches to fisheries management in the USA.

He has written extensively on using the phrases ‘rough fish’ or ‘trash fish’, both of which are used widely among anglers in North America. They mean the same as ‘coarse fish’ in the UK: fish that don’t make good eating and so aren’t considered game. The terms have problematic implications for non-game fish, as Matthew explained.

Can you talk through the use of the term ‘rough fish’ in fisheries management in the USA?

It stems from the idea of there being a hierarchy among fishes. It’s a European notion that held that coarse fishing was considered lower than game fishing. It has evolved over time, but there is still the distinction in many European waters between game fishing and coarse fishing. In the USA, that hierarchy has held, and fishing regulations in the USA distinguish between game fish and rough fish.

Often this translates to a complete lack of regulation for non-game fish. For instance, where I am in Idaho, you can take rough fish at any time of year, without limit, and you can spear them, snag them or shoot them with bows and arrows.

The regulations have not kept up with the science. We now know that some of these non-game species are long lived and slow to mature, but you can still kill them without limit.

How can this lack of regulation damage the wider ecosystem?

Bow fishing – fishing with a bow and arrow – used to be a niche hobby in the USA, but recently it has exploded in popularity. There are now specialised boats, specialised lighting, all this equipment, but very little research on the impact this is having on the ecosystem.

Game fish such as trout and bass have a lot of funding and research directed at them, but non-game fish have a real lack of both. There is anecdotal evidence of people noticing non-game fish such as bigmouth buffalo disappearing from certain waters, but there needs to be more studies. I co-authored a paper in the Fisheries journal that is calling for more research.

Blue sucker, USFWS
A blue sucker: non-game fish like this can broaden anglers’ horizons

Suckers can provide a new challenge for anglers.

In your recent Cool Green Science article, you said that fisheries should be ‘managed with science, not emotion’. Are fisheries usually regulated by emotion in the USA?

We have state fish and wildlife agencies that manage wildlife in the different states. In fact, a lot of the management of wildlife is at state level. Hunting and fishing have a democratic tradition in the USA, as there is unrestricted access and you don’t have to be a landowner.

Many of our wildlife species are well managed, but usually only if they are managed by hunters and anglers, as they have real interest in sound management of the species that they’re interested in.

There is pressure from anglers that is not based on science. They want lots of trout, so many lakes stock massive amounts of trout. We hope for there to be management based on science, but it is wishful thinking.

On the other hand, when anglers come together, they can be a powerful force for good. For instance, they have driven the reintroduction of lots of native trout species and subspecies.

Can you talk through some of the frustrating things you’ve seen from anglers with regards to non-game fish?

A viral video this summer showed two bowfishers counting off 1,000 gar they killed in an outing. This is nearly impossible to achieve over a weekend of hook and line angling.

And they dumped every dead fish back into the water.

The first time I tried fishing for suckers, somebody said: “Are you having any luck with the trout?”.

I said that I’m fishing for suckers.

He said that “They’re non-native and that ‘I should kill all I can”.

People often offer me unsolicited advice and are dumbfounded when I say I’m trying to catch suckers. But, as with anything, you need to recognise when it’s best for education, and when it’s best to not go down that rabbit hole: there are people who are receptive to the message, and people who are not.

Part of what I’m trying to do is shift the narrative where I can, which doesn’t mean shifting the minds of everyone. But the more people who value the non-game fish, the more hope we have.

Solomon David holding an alligator gar © Matthew Miller
Solomon David holding an alligator gar © Matthew Miller

What can be done to educate anglers?

Rarely does making somebody aware of an issue change it.

But in the USA there is a tremendous outdoor media, and there are voices in that media that have influence, so if they say an alligator gar is a trophy fish, people will listen.

When alligator gars were featured on Jeremy Wade’s River Monsters, suddenly people wanted to go out and catch and release them. That’s a change of value among anglers that was driven by a television show.

We have a long way to go, and as with most things, it has to be a combination of a change in attitudes and change in regulation, and both of these will feed each other.

What can anglers do to be a force for positive change?

They can really get to know their streams. I know anglers who know mayfly habits and the behaviour of trout really well, but don’t really know much about the other fish species. Knowing more about the biodiversity can make you a better angler, and it can also help you expand your angling horizons – catching a bigmouth buffalo can be a tremendously challenging endeavour, and that can really flip the narrative.

Matthew’s book ‘Fishing Through the Apocalypse’ is out now. It explores what the future holds for fish and the people who pursue them through a series of fishing stories about the reality of the sport in the 21st century.

Matthew is also the editor of Cool Green Science: the conservation science blog from The Nature Conservancy.

You can find him on Twitter at @eatguineapigs.

An interview with Max Pedley

Apistogramma (c) Max Pedley
Max Pedley has been serious about fishkeeping for five years. In that time, he has amassed an impressive collection of no less than 55 tanks, containing up to 750 individual fish. We spoke to him to find out more about the hobby, and what role he thinks hobbyists have to play in freshwater conservation.

What initially drew you into keeping fish?

I suppose I’ve always been around animals, a goldfish being my first pet. My late grandma was very supportive of my interest in the natural world and happily obliged when I dragged her around almost every aquarium, zoo and butterfly house in the North! On a more serious aquarist level, my interest peaked in aquatic lessons at college and work experience in a local pet shop. One tank became two, so on and so forth until I find myself here.

Funnily enough, the college that lead my down this path is now my workplace. Seems I have gone the full circle!

Max Pedley
Max at home © Max Pedley

What do you enjoy most about fishkeeping?

That’s a tricky one to answer. On the one hand, observing and experiencing different behaviours and survival strategies is thoroughly enthralling. On the other, it’s difficult to beat the endorphin kick when you finally manage to spawn a difficult species that’s been hexing you for a few years. But it’s different for everyone, hence it is such a diverse and popular hobby.

Max’s fish room © Max Pedley

What are your favourite species to keep, and why?

Apistogramma are “my” fish. That is, they were the genus of cichlids that dragged me into the hobby at the deep end. I’ve poured so much effort into them to be rewarded with failure and success in equal proportions, yet I always go back for more. New species are being discovered and described regularly too, so that keeps them exciting. I do however have a massive soft spot for characins and betta spp., especially if they are rare or endangered.

Do you feel aquarists have a duty towards the animals and habitats that interest them?

That’s an excellent question. Everyone has a duty towards nature. It should be considered the rent we pay for our space on Earth. I don’t even think that should be aimed specifically at the animals they are interested, but if they are happy to go the extra mile for them, it should not be ignored.

It’s hard to say exactly what duty aquarists play. Ex situ breeding of threatened/endangered species and research on the captive care of such species would be very useful, especially for zoos etc. who only have a finite amount of tanks for such purposes.

Purchasing responsibly sourced livestock is a duty too. Any keeper with a moral compass should know this, as should the retailers and wholesalers importing the fish. Unfortunately, it is difficult to police in foreign counties, so emphasis must be placed on ceasing the demand.

What role do you think the average hobbyist plays in conservation?

Alas, I imagine the average hobbyist plays a very small role in conservation. It isn’t currently easy for the average hobbyist to get involved in such programmes. Not only that, many hobbyists don’t care for the animals in the wild. Unfortunately, charisma of an organism plays a huge role in how well it is conserved but given that most of the fish which need our help are small and brown, they are serially overlooked. If Cardinal tetras were at risk, that would be a different story.

And what role do you feel they should play?

Horses for courses. Entry level aquarists, those with one tank in the living room, brimmed with a teaming collection of colourful community fish probably have no intention of spending either money or time on conservation. And you can’t blame them. They might be aware of habitat loss, but do they truly understand the gravity of it? Most of the fish they keep are farmed in Southeast Asia and Eastern Europe, so conservation doesn’t directly affect their fishkeeping experience.

And so the onus should really shift to retailers. Retailers who are happy to import wild caught stock might want to consider setting aside a portion of proceeds to help conservation efforts, securing the future of their potential wares. As a matter of fact, would it not make sense for any business person who profits from wild caught fish to see a percentage go back to the wild?

Experienced, hardcore keepers can put the groundwork in. Try to raise awareness, encourage a family member, friend or colleague to buy a tank and fill it with fish to help the trade. If the trade is successful, it is more likely to help conservation in a financial sense. Or even try your hand breeding and maintaining a species at risk. Why not join a club which aims at the successful captive maintenance of particular fish? And if you can’t find such a group, consider starting one! Be proud of what you do, shout it from the rooftops and make sure everyone understands the dangers which freshwater species face.

Betta patoti © Max Pedley
Betta patoti © Max Pedley

At Shoal we see a real opportunity for fishkeepers to help fly the flag for freshwater conservation. Their hobby after all depends on healthy freshwater environments. What can fishkeepers do to ensure their actions help protect and conserve fish and other freshwater species?

Be vocal. Encourage someone to become a fishkeeper. If you are already a fishkeeper, get your children involved. Young fishkeepers are a dying breed, but very necessary. Make sure your aquatic legacy is continued.

I can tell you what I’d love to see: more documentaries based entirely on freshwater species under threat.

We are with you there, Max. There is so much wonderful footage about marine and terrestrial challenges, but not so much focused on freshwater. Given the extent of the crisis, this is surprising. If there are any natural history film producers reading, let us see some fantastic freshwater films soon!