Scientists, fishermen in Macedonia team
up to save rare trout
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[February 15, 2018]
OHRID, Macedonia (Reuters) -
Macedonian scientists and fishermen have teamed up to start the
artificial breeding of a species of trout unique to Lake Ohrid, its
tributaries and outlet, the Black Drim river.
Poaching and overfishing have driven the Ohrid trout to the verge of
extinction, despite conservation efforts, including a 10-year fishing
ban imposed by the Macedonian government that ran until 2014.
"The biggest problem is poaching with so-called tangle nets, which have
a mesh that is smaller than allowed," said Dimitar, a local fisherman.
Under the new conservation program, fishermen from Lake Ohrid use nets
to catch spawning fish, carefully placing them in holding containers.
Scientists from the Hydrobiological Institute of Ohrid then milk the roe
and sperm from the fish and release fertilized eggs into the lake, said
biologist Zoran Spirkoski.
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A hydrobiologist from the Hydrobiological Institute of Ohrid
visually checks a trout during a method of artificial spawning, in
Ohrid, Macedonia February 9, 2018. Picture taken February 9, 2018.
REUTERS/Ognen Teofilovski
"To help both the people and the Lake Ohrid trout ... a part of the
(trout) population can be ... rebuilt through this kind of
restocking," Spirkoski said.
(Reporting by Ognen Teofilovski; Writing by Aleksandar Vasovic;
Editing by Gareth Jones)
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