Since then, Division of Wildlife biologist John Alves has been
working to preserve and grow the last remaining populations of the
inconspicuous algae eating fish. These fish are found nowhere else in
the world besides the Rio Grande river drainage in Colorado and New
Mexico. Human activities have been hard on the suckers, which grow up
to four to six inches in length. "In this age of irrigation,
diversion of water and fragmentation of habitat, it's hard to find a
place, a stream that still has native fauna intact," said Alves.
Introduction of non-native species like white suckers and northern
pike, plus destruction of habitat were part of a nearly fatal equation
for the native fish.
During the last year and a half there have been a few positive
additions to that equation. The first came in the fall of 2005, when
Alves and two assistants splashed through the cold waters of Crestone
Creek in the newly designated Baca National Wildlife Refuge in the San
Luis Valley, netting and counting fish. As they surveyed the twisting
channels that flow from the rugged Sangre de Cristos and cut through
acres of grasslands on the Valley floor, they discovered a previously
unknown population of Rio Grande suckers. This was an unexpected boon
for Alves' work and he was pretty happy about it. "We've been
struggling over the last ten years to keep the populations growing in
Colorado, so it doesn't become a federally listed fish," he
said.
The good news continued last fall when the DOW team took their
buckets, nets and scales and headed further upstream on Crestone Creek
to inventory fish. Much to Alves'surprise they found more Rio Grande
Suckers higher up in the drainage. Water levels had been low during
periods of drought, so no one knew if the fish could have survived in
those sections of creek. Alves said, "I've always wondered what
was over here on this big tract of land. When it was private we didn't
have access, now that it's public we're exploring and seeing what we
can find."
Part of the DOW's efforts to increase the numbers of Rio Grande
suckers includes a breeding program at its Native Aquatic Species
Hatchery in Alamosa. It wasn't easy getting the fish to reproduce and
survive in captivity though. Hatchery manager Dave Schnoor said,
"By 2003 we were getting eggs produced on a regular basis but when
the fry hatched off they wouldn't feed. They wouldn't accept any
food."