More Upper Bay of Fundy Atlantic salmon are coming home
Global News
Biologists are encouraged about the number of Inner Bay of Fundy Atlantic Salmon returning to Fundy National Park to spawn.
An endangered species once found in the thousands in the river waters of Fundy National Park is finally making a comeback like never before.
“It is a tremendously encouraging sign and we are super excited about it,” said John Whitelaw, Fundy National Park’s species at risk ecologist.
Whitelaw said that 102 Inner Bay of Fundy Atlantic salmon have returned from the ocean to spawn in the Upper Salmon River and Point Wolf River within the park since July. He said that is the highest annual number recorded since 1989.
“We don’t get a lot of wins in this business for the amount of work we put in and as folks can appreciate, trying to recover an endangered species is a challenging feat,” Whitelaw said.
Roughly 40,000 Inner Bay of Fundy Atlantic salmon once populated 40 rivers in the east, a number that has in recent years dropped to 100 or less. “It has experienced a really drastic decline in the last three decades,” Whitelaw said.
For the past five years, researchers with the Fundy Salmon Recovery Project have been collecting juveniles hatched in the river to be reared to maturity at the world’s first wild Atlantic salmon marine conservation farm on Grand Manan island run by Cooke Aquaculture, Whitelaw said.
He said the premise of the research project is to limit human contact with the fish.
“The less time fish can be in the captive environment, the stronger they are and the better equipped they are to survive in the wild,” he said.