UMPIRE — The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission last week released 80 leopard darters into the wild thanks to the help of many partners at the state and federal level, as well as Conservation Fisheries, LLC, a private hatchery specializing in propagating rare and threatened species.
According to Chance Garrett, fish ecologist for the AGFC, this release is the first of two scheduled for the Cossatot River in western Arkansas this year and is the first historical reintroduction effort of leopard darters anywhere.
“We plan to release another 250 leopard darters in early October,” Garrett said. “All of the fish were grown from broodstock that originally came from the Mountain Fork River which flows from Arkansas into Oklahoma.”
The leopard darter was added to the Endangered Species Act’s threatened status in 1978. It is only found in Oklahoma and Arkansas and has seen substantial declines in its remaining populations.
“They originally thought it was only found in Oklahoma, but some populations were found in the Rolling Fork and Cossatot after its listing,” Garrett said. “Those two populations are thought to no longer exist, so this effort to re-establish them is extremely important.”
Garrett says if the effort is successful, it may change the way the species is managed in the future.
“This is actually the second year of the project,” Garrett said. “The first year we saw low survival at the hatchery level, but those fish that did survive were added to the broodstock for this year’s effort. The people at Conservation Fisheries have been doing this sort of work longer than I’ve been alive, so they’ve really been a key source of information on how to move forward with the project with the success we’ve seen so far.”
Additional partners in the effort included Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission, Arkansas State Parks, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service representatives from Oklahoma and Arkansas, USDA Forest Service’s Ouachita National Forest, and Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation.