Salmon 'at risk of extinction' as study launched

Jon Cuthill
Environment Correspondent, BBC South
Emily Ford
BBC News, South
BBC A CGI image of a salmon swimming through the water. The fish's scales are a mixture of pale grey and blue colours. It has a singular dorsal fin and adipose fin on its back, two pectoral fins, and a tail. The water is a dark blue, turning black in the distant background and on the waterbed are a number of different sized and shaped brown rocks, with some greenery floating between the rocks.BBC
Atlantic salmon are at risk of extinction according to experts due to issues getting from the River Itchen to the sea

The head of an environmental charity fears Atlantic salmon are at risk of extinction if their young cannot reach the sea.

The Environment Agency has launched a study to look for ways to help the species travel from the River Itchen in Hampshire, to the ocean.

The agency says juvenile salmon in Southampton, known as smolts, are struggling to get past barriers in the river, which is contributing to population decline.

CEO of Wessex Rivers Trust, Dr Dave Rumble, said the salmon's future looked "pretty bleak" unless things changed.

He added: "Extinction is looking like a real possibility within a small number of years if we don't really rally some activity."

Dr Dave Rumble stands looking slightly off camera as he gives a TV interview. Behind him is the River Itchen, a large expanse of blue water with some greenery and a boathouse in the background and a few white yachts docked on the water. Dr Rumble has short light brown hair and a short beard, with tortoiseshell round thick framed glasses and a grey collared shirt.
Dr Dave Rumble is among those working with the Environment Agency to help boost the salmon population

The Environment Agency will be investigating the lower part of the River Itchen, between Woodmill to Mansbridge.

By October it expects to "identify suitable options" to help salmon, including river habitat, improving fish passage and more community engagement.

Jackie Mellan, the agency's project manager for the study, said: "The River Itchen has really changed in the past 10 years.

"The first step is finding out what can be done to improve the river system and increase its ecological resilience. For salmon that means improving migration to the sea and boosting their odds of returning to spawn."

'More smolt friendly'

Shoals of juvenile salmon start their journey from the Itchen to the sea in the spring, but experts say the fish are "struggling to get past the first hurdle" due to changes around the estuary.

In a statement, the agency explained: "It was once used for transport and trade as a sea lock and onward travel to Winchester. Now, the current structures control water levels through Riverside Park.

"These structures present the biggest obstacles for smolts, especially in large groups."

It said the change in water velocity makes smolts "bunch up", adding: "Eventually the current carries them over or under the structures and back onto their journey to the sea.

"But the delay impedes their migration and worsens the odds of them completing their lifecycle and eventually returning as adults to spawn."

The agency is now working with partners, like Wessex Rivers Trust, to figure out how to make fish passage "more smolt friendly".

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