Study: Hatchery fish can succeed if bred from wild

GRANTS PASS, Ore. (AP) - New research has found that a hatchery using wild salmon to spawn the next generation can help rebuild endangered salmon runs without passing on genetic problems that threaten future returns.
The study, published Monday in the online edition of the scientific journal Molecular Ecology, contrasts earlier research suggesting that hatcheries themselves genetically select for fish that go on to fail once they are released into the wild.
Researchers from the Columbia River Intertribal Fish Commission and the Nez Perce Tribe tracked an endangered run of chinook salmon in Johnson Creek in the Salmon River Basin in Idaho from 1998 through 2010 — more than two full generations. The commission and the Nez Perce Tribe have long been strong advocates for using hatcheries to rebuild endangered salmon runs, a practice questioned by some scientists.
Genetic sampling from 7,726 adult fish returning to spawn showed that fish born and raised in the hatchery from parents taken from the wild produced adult fish that returned from the ocean at a higher rate — an average of 4.69 times higher — than fish spawned naturally in the river. When those returning fish spawned naturally in the river, they produced offspring that returned at an average rate of 1.32 times higher over two brood years. They also found that male fish raised in hatcheries typically had a lower rate of success reproducing than wild males.
"This helps us realize that supplementation programs can be effective at boosting populations that are endangered while having very limited genetic impact on wild populations," said co-author Shawn Narum, lead geneticist for the commission.
Hatcheries have long been used to make up for lost habitat, such as dams blocking access to spawning grounds, and the vast majority of salmon in the Columbia basin are born in hatcheries. But it eventually became clear that traditional hatchery practices were one of the problems that have led to 13 runs of salmon and steelhead being protected by the Endangered Species List. While scientists have urged practices to change, change has been slow, and hatcheries producing salmon only from wild brood stock are rare. It is more difficult and more expensive to go into the wild to collect fish for spawning than it is to wait for fish to swim into the hatchery.
David Noakes, professor of fisheries at Oregon State University and senior scientist at the Oregon Hatchery Research Center, was not part of the study. He said the research was well done and published in a highly respected journal.
He noted that earlier research suggesting hatcheries produce inferior fish was done with a different species, steelhead, which could account for the different findings. Steelhead do not all die after spawning, and in nature spend two years in rivers before migrating to the ocean to mature. However, when raised in hatcheries, they are fed heavily to speed up their growth so they can be released after only one year. Unlike chinook salmon, many steelhead never go to the ocean, but remain in rivers as rainbow trout.
Another factor could be that fish bred in hatcheries do not get to choose their mates, the way animals from fruit flies to humans do in real life, he added.
"It is important to understand, and they make this clear in the study, that hatcheries are a tool that can be used for a variety of purposes," Noakes said. "They are not a solution, they are a tool."
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
Just a thought. I worked in a salmon/coho/steelhead hatchery in the late 60's, early 70's and noted the males were selected by staff fairly randomly. Eggs were transported all over the place and stream specific genetics were not a consideration. A salmon is a salmon. Shortly later I was commercial fishing with my brother and caught two coho, presumably traveling together  that averaged 33 lbs each, just monsters. Did they stay out too long or were they a genetic "super-silver" that were specific to some stream?  In the wild, perhaps the hen is responsible for selection of the male partner, doing a better job of recognizing genetics than humans attempting to help them.  Any thoughts on that?  Â
 @Brownknight Good morning Brownknight...I would be very interested in knowing which river system you were working on. I do know that extra large wild coho were/are produced in the Salmon river and both the Nestucca rivers. I caught many of these 'hogs' in the past, commercial fishing, with one that 'dressed out' at over 24 pounds.Â
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Also I might add that strict attention to the genetics is very important for successful brood stock results. Â Any other 'willy nilly' approach to brood stock will end in disappointment in the long run.
 @Brownknight @yaquina My post disappeared. The two salmon weighted in at 67.5 lbs. I can remember that, but not where my keys are. They were caught on the N. channel of the Columbia across from Tongue Pt., not far from the old quarenteen station. That was in 72 or 73. About 1966 a kid caught a 41lb 10 oz silver on a charter boat out of Ilwaco. My mom saved the article for me, maybe because I was bragging too much about my first big salmon, a 38 lb Chinook. LOL I have heard the White Salmon may have had a run of super-silvers years ago. Never really followed up on it.
Mabe so, but the meat of these fish looses it's firmness and becomes mushy from being pond fed.
Persons that say they are 'restoring' waterways need to take a deep breath and realize that until the tribs/mainsteams of the rivers have large conifer trees (fir, cedar, spruce, hemlock vine maple and native brush (elder, salmon, willow, oregon grape and other native plants growing in the reparation zone the creeks and rivers are not 'restored'Â
Well here is my take on this, as salmon 'restoration'' work was done personally by myself and lots of other commercial fisherman on a long list of rivers along the Oregon coast in the mid 1990s as 'hire the fishers'.
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The STEP group in the Siuslaw river system (110 miles long} with an outstanding group of old farts that did amazing work on the river system, with a lot of help from the 6 plus 1 'hire the fishers' group until the ODF&W office was closed in 1996 ? , and funding for the project was curtailed soon after the bush son was president This event happened even with two back to back 100 year floods on this river system and the salmon and steelhead trout expanded their territory .
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The STEP group used WILD STOCK for breeding with both steelhead and coho salmon with stunning results, even with the two floods involved. The local lakes that have wild runs of salmon, mostly coho have not had a problem with low numbers especially Tahkenithch Lake on the way to Reedsport.
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However I also witnessed a fish hatchery placed on the Salmon river at the base of Cascade Head that naturally produced extremely large wild coho salmon (15 to 20 pounders) before the damn/ blockade that was decimated by a non wild coho introduction of non native small coho for sport purposes.
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Hat's off to the native persons for their efforts ............and keep up the excellent work...go salmon and trout.
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Oh I forgot to mention the large amount of 'impassable culverts' to spawning grounds, that the 'hire the fishers' uncovered and are still being addressed today.