In a boost for freshwater species and ecosystems, conservationists will release the golden skiffia back into the Teuchitlán River after it vanished from the wild 28 years ago
For immediate release, November 02, 2022
More than two dozen years since the golden skiffia (Skiffia francesae) disappeared from its only natural habitat in Mexico, a team of conservationists will release the species back into the wild. The release date set for Nov. 4—in the midst of the country’s cultural Day of the Dead celebrations—is fitting as families honor their departed ancestors and welcome them back from the dead for a night. Day of the Dead is Nov. 2, but celebrations continue locally.
“The Day of the Dead is a traditional Mexican celebration, when it is believed that people’s deceased ancestors return to the land of the living for one night, to talk and spend time with their families,” said Omar Domínguez-Domínguez, a professor and researcher from the Michoacan University of Mexico, who is leading the golden skiffia reintroduction. “Releasing the golden skiffia around this time is a metaphor for how the species has come back from the dead to return to its home, not for one night, but forever.”
Bringing the species back from the ‘dead’ is the result of collaborative conservation work between Michoacan University of Mexico, Chester Zoo, Goodeid Working Group, Re:wild and SHOAL. On Nov. 4, 2022, the team will release approximately 1,200 golden skiffia into the species’ native range in the Teuchitlán River, Jalisco, Mexico. The fish all come from a conservation breeding program.
The golden skiffia has not been seen in the wild since the 1990s. Human impacts such as dam construction, water extraction, pollution and the introduction of invasive species have caused major changes to the skiffia’s habitat, pushing it to extinction in its only home. Conservationists hope that the fish released on Nov. 4 will ultimately result in a healthy, self-sustaining population taking hold so the species can fulfil its important natural role in the ecosystem of eating algae and mosquito larvae, which helps keep populations of those species in check.
"With thousands of freshwater species threatened with extinction, the story of the golden skiffia returning to the wild is inspiring evidence of the many opportunities for conservation impact that together can reverse the freshwater biodiversity crisis,” said Harmony Patricio, SHOAL conservation program manager and Re:wild’s freshwater fish conservation program manager. “The SHOAL partnership is expanding freshwater species conservation awareness, funding, capacity and action to meet the level of the challenge, and positive stories such as the golden skiffia reintroduction can help draw attention to the challenges facing freshwater ecosystems, which have historically been overlooked and underfunded.”
The release of the golden skiffia has been many years in planning: in 2014, scientists from the Michoacan University of Mexico and passionate fishkeepers from the Goodeid Working Group helped restore the species’ degraded habitat and remove non-native species from the Teuchitlán ecosystem, removing the threats that caused the species to become extinct in the wild and laying the foundations for a successful reintroduction.
This project is part of Fish Ark Mexico, a conservation project in central Mexico that focuses on 41 highly threatened species of freshwater fish. Fish Ark Mexico has more than 20 years of experience in Mexican fish conservation and has succeeded in keeping 39 species of endangered and extinct-in-the-wild goodeid species in captivity. The Fish Ark facility at the Michoacan University of Mexico in Morelia has been supported by several national and international conservation organisations, including Chester Zoo, Re:wild and SHOAL.
The golden skiffia release comes six years after the successful reintroduction of the tequila splitfin (Zoogonetcus tequila), which faced very similar threats to the golden skiffia and which was also bred in a conservation breeding program and released into the Teuchitlán River. Domínguez-Domínguez also led that work. The population of tequila splitfin there is now thriving, and the project has been cited as an International Union for the Conservation of Nature case study for successful global reintroductions.
“Releasing this species back into the wild is a light of hope for this wonderful family of fishes—the goodeids—and for the conservation of freshwater fish more generally,” Domínguez-Domínguez said. “Knowing that universities, zoos and aquarists can come together to fix some of what has been destroyed and return to nature some of what has been lost is an amazing thing. The reintroduction will benefit not only the natural ecosystem but, because of the habitat restoration work that has already occurred, the communities that live near the river as well.”
In preparation for the species’ return to the wild, individuals due for release have first been placed in ponds, where they are expected to adapt to semi-captive conditions. Individuals due for release are dewormed and marked, then taken to floating cages in the river known as mesocosms where they are kept for at least a month, so that they can adapt to natural conditions before release.
Individuals released into the wild are tagged with a non-toxic elastomer before release and will be monitored for the next five years to assess whether the population is increasing and whether the fish are reproducing and growing successfully in their natural habitat.
With one in three freshwater fish threatened with extinction, they are the most threatened group of vertebrates on the planet. Conservation work such as the release of golden skiffia back into the wild will be vital to ensuring extinctions are halted and populations are given the best possible chances of bouncing back from the brink. The Michoacan University of Mexico, Chester Zoo, the Goodeid Working Group and SHOAL are currently developing a plan to save Mexican goodeid species—one of the world’s most threatened group of fish—which includes the golden skiffia and tequila splitfin.
“This project is a great example of how zoos can contribute to conservation in the field through captive breeding and research, using animals born in captivity, and the skills and experience that have been developed through their captive management, to establish new wild populations, or to strengthen existing populations,” said Paul Bamford, regional program manager for Latin America at Chester Zoo. “By holding goodeid species up as flagships for freshwater conservation in Mexico and building projects and strategies to protect them and the ecosystems where they live, we are not only protecting biodiversity and the wellbeing of freshwater environments, but also the people and communities that live alongside them.”
This project has been made possible by generous funding and support from ZooParc de Beauval, Wilhelma Zoo, Haus des Meers Aquarium, Zoo Ostrava, Poecilia Scandinavia, American Livebearer Association, Mohamed Bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund, Zoological Society for the Conservation of Species and Populations (Zoologische Gesellschaft für Arten- und Populationsschutz - ZGAP), European Union of Aquarium Curators and The Fishmongers’ Company.
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Photo: Golden skiffia Day of the Dead artwork by Adriana Arellano Tinoco
Chester Zoo
Chester Zoo is a world-leading conservation and education charity that’s committed to preventing extinction and dedicated to raising awareness of key conservation and environmental challenges. The zoo’s 128-acre site in Chester, which is home to more than 27,000 animals and more than 500 species, is where this species-saving work is made possible. The zoo’s work focuses on more than 3,000 species globally, with over 100 partners in more than 20 countries, and includes 140 international animal conservation breeding programs, which are ensuring the survival of species on the very brink of extinction. Learn more at chesterzoo.org
Goodeid Working Group
The Goodeid Working Group is a non-profitable international working group managed and run on a 100% voluntary basis. It was established on 01 May 2009 in Stoholm, Denmark in response to the critical environmental issues facing the majority of wild goodeid species and populations, plus the poorly-documented ‘disappearance’ of many captive collections. The primary goal of the Goodeid Working Group is to promote collaboration between like-minded hobbyists, universities, public aquaria, zoos, museums and conservation projects in order to maintain aquarium populations of goodeids while assisting in preservation of remaining natural habitats. Find out more at goodeidworkinggroup.com.
SHOAL
SHOAL is the global collaborative initiative to halt the extinction and recover populations of the most threatened freshwater species in the wild. Freshwater species are going extinct faster than their marine or terrestrial cousins, and almost one in three of those alive today could soon disappear, never to return. There is an urgent need for determined action, and SHOAL is building a strong community of partners that work together to give critical attention, escalate support, and accelerate and intensify the action that is required to stem the tide of extinction and recover endangered species populations throughout the Earth’s freshwaters. Join The Shoal at shoalconservation.org.
SHOAL is a program of Synchronicity Earth and Re:wild. Synchronicity Earth is a charity registered in the UK and Wales No: 1132786 and a company limited by guarantee No: 06952204. Re:wild is a U.S.-based 501(c)3 non-profit corporation.
Re:wild
Re:wild protects and restores the wild. We have a singular and powerful focus: the wild as the most effective solution to the interconnected climate, biodiversity and human wellbeing crises. Founded by a group of renowned conservation scientists together with Leonardo DiCaprio, Re:wild is a force multiplier that brings together Indigenous peoples, local communities, influential leaders, nongovernmental organizations, governments, companies and the public to protect and rewild at the scale and speed we need. Learn more at rewild.org.