| Saving
the Shiners A suggestion that she is queen of the shiners makes Leslie
Leckvarcik roll her eyes and chuckle. Thats silly, she
responds. They are just little fish I learned to breed. But I do
hope to restore them.
 |
| Thanks to graduate
student Leslie Leckvarcik learning how to breed two rare species
of shiners in aquaria, endangered populations of the little fish
may be replenished and established in northeastern Pennsylvania's
Brodhead Creek drainage. |
The doctoral student downplays
the importance of her efforts to rescue endangered populations of two
obscure fish species in northeastern Penn-sylvanias
Brodhead Creek drainage. However, if it werent for her research,
overseen by ichthyologist Jay Stauffer, there soon might not be any ironcolor
or bridle shiners in the Keystone State.
Surrounded by dozens of aquaria holding thousands of shiners at the
Universitys
Rock Springs laboratory nine miles southwest of the University Park campus,
Leckvarcik explains how she became queenmake that saviorof
these Pennsylvania shiners. She hopes to introduce the little fish she has
propagated into suitable habitat.
When my adviser offered me the chance to study the ironcolor shiner, which
is found only in Marshalls Creek near Stroudsburgan area I like and with
which I am familiarI jumped at it, she says.
Portions of this half-mile section of the Monroe County tributary to
Brodhead Creek appear to have escaped the loss of bank-side vegetation,
widening, siltation,
and warming that spelled disaster for other shiner communities throughout the
rest of the region. Now, however, a highway project threatens this last refuge
of Pennsylvanias two rarest shiners.
The Marshalls Creek Bypass will alleviate chronic traffic congestion around
the intersections of U.S. Route 209, Business Route 209, and State Route 402.
Although designers have selected an alignment expected to have the least impact
on the stream, concern remains that sediment and silt generated by construction
may affect both species of shiners, which are extremely sensitive to muddy
water.
 |
| Top and lateral
view of ironcolor shiner eggs and larvae (3 to 7 days after hatching).
The edge of a dime appears in the upper left corner. |
Officials of
the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) and the Fish
and Boat Commission are taking no chances. Under
Stauffers guidance, a project to re-establish populations of ironcolor
and bridle shiners elsewhere in the Brodhead Creek watershed began in
2000.
The project uses the offspring of a small number of wild shiners taken
from Marshalls Creek because Stauffer preferred to preserve Pennsylvanias
native genetic stock instead of introducing shiners from outside the state.
Leckvarciks challenge was to get the wild shiners to breed in aquariums.
The ironcolor shiner had never been bred in a laboratory before, says
Leckvarcik. I experimented with lighting, temperatures, and food supply,
trying to simulate winter conditions changing into springand the ironcolor
shiners responded. The females became full of eggs, and the males colored and
began chasing the females.
She devised and installed boxes covered with vinyl mesh netting on
the aquarium bottoms to capture the eggs and prevent the parents from
eating them. The
next day I saw eggs in the boxes, and two days later we had larvae. That first
year we started with 25 adults and produced 800 offspring.
All 800 were breeders for the next year. About four months later, she tried
the same technique to breed bridle shiners, with similar success. After repeating
the process numerous times, Penn State now has thousands of shiners of both
species for reintroduction into their native streams, and suitable habitat
sites are being selected for stocking.
The breeding program first was funded by PennDOT and restoration efforts are
being funded by the Fish and Boat Commission using money from the Federal Wildlife
Conservation and Restoration Program, an initiative designed for high-priority,
high-profile conservation projects.
The bridle shiner is being considered for federal endangered species status;
the ironcolor shiner is rare, but more plentiful across its range, Leckvarcik
notes. I hope that this project will lead to the restoration of both species
in Pennsylvania. Historically, bridle shiners were found in 36 streams in this
state and the ironcolor shiner was found in four Pennsylvania watersheds.
If were successful, maybe we can put them back where they belong
in some of those streams that have recovered from human impact to the point where
they could support a population of these fishes. This restoration effort might
result in thriving populations of gamefish that feed on shiners, in turn benefiting
humans who enjoy them for recreation.
Jeff Mulhollem
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