Does translocation and restocking confer any benefit to the European eel population? A review



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Does translocation and restocking confer any benefit to the European eel population?

A review

Final Report: Mike Pawson 7 August 2012



Contents

Executive summary…………………………………………………………………………………..2

Introduction and background………………………………...………….………………………...5

Nomenclature (6)

Conservation of eels (6)

The purpose of this review and its structure (7)

Scientific advice on stocking with eels: scope of this review…………………………………….9

Previous reviews of eel stocking

A brief history of stocking with eels

Sourcing eel for stocking

Capture and transport

Environment and habitat suitability for stocking

Where to stock

On-growing – is there a net benefit to survival or growth?

Post-stocking survival to silver eel stage

Growth

Stocking density and yield-per-recruit


Sex differentiation

Maturation

Reproductive potential

The contribution of stocked eels to the spawning run

Behaviour of stocked vs native eels

Upstream dispersion

Emigration - from fresh water to sea

Migration – at sea

Disease and parasites - risks to native stock

Genetic implications of stocking

Other risks associated with stocking

Determining net benefit of stocking

Discussion and conclusions

Acknowledgements.

Bibliography (separate file)

Executive Summary:

The European Commission has established an Eel Recovery Plan (ERP) with the objectives of protection, recovery and sustainable use of the European eel stock. To achieve these objectives, Member States have an obligation to develop eel national management plans for each of their river basin districts (RBDs), the objective of which is to provide a long-term escapement to the sea of the biomass of silver eel equivalent to 40% of the best estimate of the theoretical escapement if the stock had been completely free of anthropogenic influences.


One management option identified in the ERP is to stock inland waters with glass eels, elvers or small yellow eels in order to enhance the production of adult (silver) eels, and hence contribute to compliance with a RBD’s 40% silver eel escapement target. This management measure is based on the well-founded observation that there is low recruitment (of glass eels/elvers) and depleted populations of growing yellow eels in a large proportion of formerly productive freshwater habitats across Europe, which has led to a reduction in the number of escaping silver eels (e.g. potential spawners) in the European eel population as a whole.
Article 7 of EU COM 1100/2007 requires that any Member State that permits fishing for glass eels/elvers must reserve at least 35% of the catch for stocking purposes within the EU in the first year of a compulsory EMP (which is assumed to be 2010), increasing by at least 5% per year to achieve at least 60% by 31st July 2013. Given the high price of glass eels/elvers on the commercial market (around Euro 350-650 per kg in 2012 and the relative scarcity of glass eels, stocking programmes must be as cost-effective as possible. Furthermore, the benefits of stocking with young eels will not be realised for at least 5-10 years, when the growing yellow eels begin to mature into silver eels.

This review was commissioned by SEG via the Living North Sea project, to provide a synthesis of the available data and information about the instances and effectiveness of re-stocking with eels as a conservation measure to increase the net production of silver eels. The basic question “is there a net benefit of trans-locating eels compared with leaving them to migrate naturally” has been addressed by compiling (mainly) published evidence for the performance of stocked eels in terms of survival, growth and behaviour, as measured in fisheries and experimental studies across Europe. The remit of this review does not extend to evaluation of the availability of eels for stocking, costs of stocking, or the reproductive capacity (in terms of future recruitment) of silver eels. Such issues are, however, touched upon where relevant.

The main findings are as follows:
There is considerable evidence that stocked eels do survive and escape as silver eels, but it is difficult to evaluate whether survival to escaping silver eel is reduced by translocation(to the extent that there may be an overall loss to spawner production). This is mainly because stocking studies have not been accompanied by controls without translocation, though models exist that might provide indicative outcomes. It is, however, logical to assume that enhancing eel populations throughout the species natural range where recruitment has been poor, must increase overall production.
It is equally unclear whether there are differences in the growth rate of stocked and naturally recruited eel that may lead to an overall loss of biomass of escaping silver eel. Even if stocked eels do grow more slowly than native eels (for which there is no evidence), density effects on growth and sex ratio are more likely to influence growth rates and eventual biomass production.
Estimates of the yield that results from stocking with glass eels or small yellow eels have generally been within the range 20-70 g per recruit (4-14 kg per hectare, at a nominal stocking density of 200 glass eels per hectare), though there is obviously a confounding effect on yield of stocking density and potential productivity of the water body into which eels are stocked. This demonstrates that stocking with eels does lead to a quantifiable increase in yield of yellow or silver eel in the stocking location, but we cannot say whether this is an overall increase compared to leaving the glass eels in situ (and not catching them for purposes other than stocking).

There do not appear to be any benefits arising from on growing of glass eels in aquaculture facilities before stocking (in terms of overall survival and growth), though holding glass eels with at least maintenance feeding until the time that they can be stocked with a good chance of survival in otherwise cold or ice-bound northern waters is a positive option.


The available evidence shows no clear relationship between stocking density and yield, which probably reflects the variations in stocked waters’ carrying capacity for eels and also in the various studies’ protocols.
We simply do not know whether changes in the sex ratio of eels as stock density changes represent a risk to reproduction (during spawning), chiefly because the influence of sex ratio at spawning is not known, though it might be presumed that a shift towards females would result in higher overall population fecundity. The default strategy would be to stock in such a way that local densities mirror those that obtained during the period when recruitment was high (1950-1970), if known.
There is good (if indirect) evidence that stocking has resulted in a proportional increase in escaping silver eels, though estimates of effectiveness vary depending on the growth area (fresh, brackish or marine waters) and barriers to emigration.
There is little evidence (but few studies) of any consistent difference between stocked and native eels in somatic (size, fat/lipid content) and reproductive factors (maturation indices, spawning potential) that might result in lower spawning success in stocked eels.
There is insufficient evidence to know whether any behavioural impairments due to translocation that could reduce the success of spawning, though there is evidence that the migratory behaviour of stocked-origin silver eels is similar to that of native eels. It would be prudent, however, to ensure that stocking results in well dispersed eels and only occurs where there are few if any obstacles to sea-ward migration.

As with any translocation of living material, there a risk of spreading of disease and parasites when eels are moved from one area to another. This can be minimised, however, by using glass eels caught by fishing methods that cause the least damage and transporting quickly in conditions that avoid undue stress (density, water quality, temperature). If it is considered necessary to hold eels prior to stocking, it is advisable to start with good quality glass eels (free of parasites and disease, and from areas with low chemical contamination risk) and to use quarantine facilities where eels can be tested, if necessary.


It seems unlikely that the genetic structure of eel populations in recipient waters could be altered by introductions of eels from elsewhere. Current scientific opinion is that the European eel population is essentially genetically unstructured (panmictic), and any genetic variation due to temporal and spatial sub-structuring within recruitment (which is inevitable) is likely to be minimised by stocking either locally (within RBDs or countries, for example) or where eels no longer recruit naturally (but growth and escapement opportunities are good).
Despite a considerable body of information, there are no clear answers to the issues mentioned above, chiefly because very few studies have been carried out in a controlled way. Nevertheless, the results of this review can be regarded as setting a benchmark derived from the scientific evidence available up to May 2012. This enables us to challenge what we do and do not know about the benefits of stocking with eel, to make decisions about the most rewarding focus of new work, and to judge new results as they become available.
To help future decisions, documented assessments of the risks of stocking should be carried out (with explicit scientific input), both to judge whether stocking should take place and to assist with post-stocking monitoring. This should aim to assess whether stocking has been successful in achieving its objectives (usually lacking) and, if adverse effects of stocking are encountered, to guide corrective measures.
Where stocking continues, this review suggests that there are advantages of stocking with glass eels/elvers because of the larger numbers available (though in a limited season), that have not been subject to local density-dependent and habitat influenced mortality, lower risk of disease and parasite transfer, lower transportation costs, and lower impact on local donor populations at recipient sites. The advantages of stocking with small yellow eels (wild-caught) are a lower mortality after stocking, a more predictable outcome, shorter time before spawning escapement and, possibly, later relocation could facilitate seaward migration.
With respect to ICES’ concern that stocked/trans-located eels experience impairment of their navigational abilities, this review has provided evidence that stocked eel will, in productive environments, produce yellow and silver eels that will attempt to migrate. As yet, however, no eel, let alone one of stocked origin, has been followed to the spawning grounds, and we do not yet know whether there is any net benefit of translocation and restocking to the next generation of glass eels compared to leaving glass eels to recruit naturally.

This does not mean that there are no benefits to be gained from stocking. As long as there is substantial recruitment of glass eels to estuaries from which they are prevented from ascending local rivers because of permanent barrages, catching and trans-locating them with minimal mortality to productive habitats, from which they can escape back to the sea, must be a beneficial option.  A less quantifiable option, that might benefit the species by ensuring diversity in the spawning population, is to stock European eels in those parts of their natural range where there is currently no or little recruitment and where phenotypic variation can be maximised (warm saline lagoons in the eastern Mediterranean; cold freshwater lakes in Scandinavia, for example).

Two areas for future research have been highlighted by this review. First, the use of quantitative population models to investigate the yield of silver eels from stocking compared to leaving glass eels to recruit naturally (the control situation). Second, further examination of the reproductive fitness of silver eels originating from stocking compared to native-origin eels, and the migratory behaviour and capability to reach the spawning grounds of eels in northern and southern continental Europe, north Africa, the eastern Mediterranean and along the Atlantic coast.

Introduction and background to this review

Recruitment to the European eel (Anguilla anguilla) population has declined since the 1970s to levels that are considered to be unsustainable unless strong conservation measures are introduced (ICES, 2011a). Data complied by the Joint European Inland Fisheries Advisory Commission (EIFAC)/International Council for the Exploration of the Seas (ICES) Working Group on Eel (WGEEL) indicate a downward trend in the numbers of glass eels being recruited to European waters since the high levels of the 1970s. In England and Wales, for example, commercial glass eel catch data indicate recruitment has declined by 75–90% since the 1980s, tending to stabilise in the late 1990s and showing some recovery in western regions in 2010 and 2011 (Walker et al., 2011). Declines elsewhere in Europe appear to have been more severe and to have occurred earlier in more northerly Scandinavian and southerly Mediterranean areas (Knights et al., 2001; ICES 2011b). The factors that may be responsible for this recruitment decline include overfishing, pollution, disease and parasites and other freshwater habitat constraints (drainage, barriers to migration, hydro-power turbines etc), though there may also be a contribution due to changes in Atlantic currents affecting the trans-oceanic migration of leptocephali (Kettle and Haines, 2006; Bonhommeau, 2009). Oceanic factors are also implicated in the decline in recruitment of the American eel Anguilla rostrata to North America in recent decades, which has followed a similar trend to that of A. anguilla in Europe (Symonds, 2007).


Before proceeding further, it is useful to remind ourselves of the life cycle of the European eel and particularly of the freshwater life stages that are the most susceptible to anthropogenic influence, and where measures to conserve the species are directed (Figure 1). Leptocephalus larvae, most probably derived from spawning in the Sargasso Sea, are carried eastwards by currents for two or three years across the North Atlantic Ocean towards the coasts of western Europe, the Mediterranean and North Africa (McCleave, 1993; Bonhommeau, 2009) and, on reaching the continental shelf, metamorphose to the unpigmented glass eel stage. They enter estuaries when temperatures rise above 4-6°C; in the winter in the Bay of Biscay and more southern areas and in spring in Britain (Naismith and Knights 1988; White and Knights 1997). Major glass eel runs still occur into the Atlantic-facing estuaries in North Africa, Portugal, Spain, France and the UK (the most important fisheries for glass eel are in French estuaries in the Bay of Biscay and the Bristol Channel and Severn Estuary), probably because of the more favourable position of the west coast relative to Atlantic oceanic migration pathways (Knights 2002). Glass eels settle out of the water column and metamorphose into pigmented elvers around the point of tidal reversal in estuaries.
Figure 1. The European Eel Life Cycle (from Williams and Aprahamian, 2004)

Coastal

Estuarine

Freshwater

Silver eel migration

Spawning in Sargasso Sea

Leptocephalus Larvae

Glass eel

Elver

Yellow eel

Silver eel migration

Yellow eel

Yellow eel

Elver

Elver

Oceanic Phase

Continental Phase

The elvers may remain and feed in coastal marine or estuarine waters or begin active upstream migration in freshwater, where they disperse to feed and grow for up to 20 or more years as yellow eels before maturing into silver eels, at which stage they migrate back to the oceanic spawning grounds. Sex determination in eels takes place during the growing phase, and appears to be influenced by density and growth rates. This process is discussed more fully later, but suffice it to say here that age (usually expressed as time after transformation from glass eels into elvers) at silvering may range from 2-4 years in Mediterranean waters to 40+ years in cold Scandinavian waters, and is earlier for male eels than for females. The population dynamics of eels is also discussed later in relation to evaluation of the processes that determine the production of seaward-migrating adult silver eels from glass eels, though it is pertinent to mention that current scientific thinking is that European eels comprise a single panmictic stock, i.e. there is no significant genetic structuring within the population (see Genetics).


Eels are ubiquitous in their distribution, being found in all types of fresh, brackish and coastal waters, and the European eel is most active at temperatures above 14-16°C and relatively inactive when temperatures fall below 5-10°C, commonly remaining in burrows during winter, often in deeper water where conditions remain more constant (Tesch 1977; White and Knights 1997a). Eels are carnivores, feeding on a wide range of invertebrates and fish, and have a relatively high energy value, especially as they build up fat reserves for over-wintering and as they mature ready for migration back to the Atlantic Ocean (Tesch 1977; Knights 1982).
Nomenclature
There are numerous names for the various life stages of the eel (even in English), and these are not necessarily used consistently in the studies and investigations upon which this review is based. In order to assist clarity, therefore, I have used five named life stages to cover the range of names used. These are:

Leptocephalus larvae – oceanic pelagic stage prior to glass eel;

Glass eel - unpigmented coastal stage (first fished stage);

Elver - pigmented stage found in estuaries and lower river reaches (the distinction between glass eel and elver is not clear cut);



Yellow eel – the juvenile, feeding stage in coastal, estuarine and fresh water, small individuals of which are sometimes called bootlace or fingerlings (possibly prior to sexual differentiation);
Silver eels – which have stopped feeding and have maturing gonads, and migrate as adults

back to the oceanic spawning grounds.
Conservation of eels
The substantial decline in recruitment (in particular) prompted ICES to advise the European Commission that the European eel stock is outside safe biological limits and that its fishery is not sustainable (ICES, 2001). The most recent assessment of the European eel’s status (ICES, 2011b) indicates that the overall stock decline continues. Overall glass eel recruitment has fallen to 5% of the 1960–1979 average in the Atlantic region and to less than 1% in the continental part of the North Sea region and shows little sign of recovery, though catch rates in some UK and France glass eel fisheries appear to have increased in the last three years. As a consequence, the abundance of young yellow eel in many areas has also declined and, put bluntly, the eel stock is in a critical state. In 2007, European eel was included in CITES Appendix II that deals with species not necessarily threatened with extinction, but for which trade must be controlled if it is necessary to avoid utilization incompatible with the survival of the species. The listing was implemented in March 2009. The European eel was listed in September 2008 as ‘critically endangered’ in the IUCN Red List (IUCN Red List website).
In response to scientific advice and stakeholders’ concerns about the plight of the European eel, the European Commission established a management framework in 2007 through an Eel Recovery Plan (ERP: EC Regulation EU COM 1100/2007; “Establishing measures for the recovery of the stock of European eel”: EC, 2007), with the objectives of protection, recovery and sustainable use of the stock. To achieve these objectives, Member States have an obligation to develop eel management plans (EMPs) for each of their river basin districts (RBD). The objective of the national EMPs is to provide, with high probability, a long-term escapement to the sea of the biomass of silver eel equivalent to 40% of the best estimate of the theoretical escapement in pristine conditions (i.e. if the stock had been completely free of anthropogenic influences). Lacking analytical assessments of the population dynamics for European eel (which are available for many commercial marine teleost fish species, and salmon, for example), this target is based on the general principle that a fish stock is likely to remain sustainable if its abundance does not fall below a particular level compared to its unexploited state. Readers wishing to explore this rationale further are refereed to the Commission’s report (EC, 2007). Where RBDs are not meeting these biomass targets, Member States are required to take action, including to reduce anthropogenic mortalities in order to increase silver eel biomass.
One management option identified in the ERP is to stock inland waters with glass eels, elvers or small yellow eels in order to enhance the production of adult (silver) eels, and hence contribute to compliance with a RBD’s 40% silver eel escapement target. This management measure is based on the well-founded observation that there is low recruitment (of glass eels/elvers) and depleted populations of growing yellow eels in a large proportion of formerly productive freshwater habitats across Europe, which has led to a reduction in the number of escaping silver eels (e.g. potential spawners) in the European eel population as a whole. This lack of recruits is, in part because of the aforementioned decline in overall recruitment, but more specifically because of constraints on migration (physical or chemical barriers) or geographical location well away from those areas where recruitment of glass eels is still relatively good, essentially the west coast of Europe: France, the UK and Ireland.
Article 7 of EU COM 1100/2007 requires that any Member State that permits fishing for glass eels/elvers (defined as eels < 120 mm totlal length, used throughout) must reserve at least 35% of the catch for stocking purposes within the EU in the first year of a compulsory EMP (which is assumed to be 2010), increasing by at least 5% per year to achieve at least 60% by 31st July 2013. The price of glass eels/elvers on the commercial market peaked at over Euro 250 kg-1 in the late 1990s, driven up by high demand for seed stock for eel farms, especially in China (Knights et al., 2001) and, although prices were about Euro 70-110 kg-1 on the European market in 2000, they have again increased considerably, to around Euro 350-650 kg-1 (depending on time of season) in 2012 (P. Woods pers. comm.). Fisheries providing eel for stocking will, therefore, require significant funding and, given the relative scarcity of glass eels, stocking programmes must be as cost-effective as possible. Furthermore, the benefits of stocking with young eels will not be realised for at least 5-10 years, when the growing yellow eels begin to mature into silver eels.

The purpose of this review and its structure
This review was commissioned by the Sustainable Eel Group (SEG) via the Living North Sea project (LNS), with the objective to provide a synthesis of the available data and information about the instances and effectiveness of re-stocking with eels as a management tool. It will be submitted to the European Commission Directorate-General for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries (DG MARE) in support of their assessment of the reports from Member States on their national EMPs.

The review is based largely on information obtained through scientific research, either published in peer-reviewed journal papers (and, therefore, of assured quality) or technical reports (which may be no less authoritative, but may have not been externally scrutinised) and, to a lesser extent, from other written communications that may contain opinion (rather than fact) to a greater or lesser extent. In the latter cases, where used, I have only included information that can be verified or appears to follow a logical argument. I have also indicated, where relevant, work that is in progress or currently unpublished, which may inform the debate in the near future. Subsequent to the first draft of this review being prepared, a substantial body of information was presented orally and as posters at the 6th World Fisheries Congress, held in Edinburgh in May 2012, which reveal the most recent advances in eel science. Though they are only currently available as abstracts (indicated as WFC, 2012), I have very briefly summarised those that were most relevant to this review (and provide new insights), both to inform and to act as a pointer for forthcoming publications on the subject.



The report is written with a wide range of stakeholders in mind, from dedicated scientists working on eel biology and population dynamics in relation to anthropogenic impacts (fishing, habitat destruction, turbines etc), through management and conservation bodies, organisations and administrations, to those with a more direct involvement with eels (fishermen and aquaculturists). It is intended that this report should be accessible to all these people, and the basis for its findings should be as explicit and traceable as possible. For this reason, I have followed scientific publishing practice in the body of the report, dealing with each issue (see contents list) in sections, in each of which the sources of evidence are indicated by citing publications (elaborated in a bibliography) and finishing with a summary of the main findings, written non-technically as far as possible and clearly indicating what we do and do not know. These findings are further discussed in the review’s conclusions, and summarised in an Executive Summary at the start of the report, for those who wish to quickly appreciate the main outcome of the review.
Where possible, the examination of evidence for the success or other wise of stocking has been structured regionally, partly in order to group information from studies carried out in similar environmental circumstances, but also because the results vary to the extent that they may not be applicable between regions. For this purpose, studies are grouped by Atlantic coast, Mediterranean, Scandinavia and mainland Europe (away from the Atlantic coast), plus north east America, where the American eel A. rostrata, shares a common spawning and oceanic larval migration route with A. anguilla. With few exceptions (particular information on biology), I have restricted this review to these two Anguillid species.


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