At the tail end of last year at the COP28 UN climate conference, the first full assessment of the world’s freshwater fish species was released by the IUCN in their update to the Red List of Threatened Species. This showed what many might have feared - that 25 per cent of freshwater fish are at risk of extinction.
The report revealed the biggest threat to freshwater fish is pollution. But there is a compound effect of dams and water extraction, both of which can make it difficult for fish to travel up and downstream, as well as invasive species, disease and overfishing too. Climate change and the changing seasons are also causing problems for threatened freshwater fish, as winter storms can damage habitat, summer water levels are decreasing and sea levels are rising causing seawater to move further up rivers.
One species in particular danger is the majestic Atlantic salmon. With its shimmering silver scales, dark spots and distinctive hooked lower jaw that develops in mature males. One of the largest fish found in UK freshwaters, it has an average lifespan of 13 years and reaches 1.2 to 1.5 metres in length. You can see why it is named across the world as the ‘King of fish’!