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WILDLIFE

Sweden releases 100 sturgeons in bid to bring extinct fish back to its rivers

The Atlantic sturgeon disappeared from Swedish waters around a century ago. But scientists just launched a ten-year project to change that.

Sweden releases 100 sturgeons in bid to bring extinct fish back to its rivers
Linnéa Jägrud and Dan Calderon release a sturgeon into the Göta älv river. Photo: Adam Ihse/TT

In the opening act, 100 young sturgeons – transferred from a farm in Germany – were introduced into the waters of Göta älv.

“To be a person who has the possibility to re-introduce a species that has been extinct nationally, it’s a gift,” biologist Dan Calderon, who came up with the idea, told AFP.

“It’s probably the best thing I’ve done,” Calderon said.

Named Störens återkomst (“The return of the sturgeon”), the project is led by the Swedish Anglers Association, which is working with several universities and Gothenburg’s museum of natural history.

The species lived in the river until the late 19th century, but gradually disappeared due to overfishing and pollution.

Today, the river is much cleaner and conditions are again right for the sturgeon, which can measure over five metres (16 feet) and weigh more than 600 kilogrammes (270 pounds), according to the University of Gothenburg.

‘Hopeful’

“I also feel hopeful because this is really, really something good we are achieving here and this is a good start,” Linnea Jägrud, the project leader, told AFP.

The effects of the reintroduction on the river ecosystem will be closely studied by researchers.

Sturgeons feed off the bottom of the river, which helps oxygenate sediment on the riverbed, therefore benefitting the small creatures that live there.

Large sturgeons can also serve as a host fish for other species such as the sea lamprey.

“One hundred does not make a population, but with the ongoing work we will build up a strong population and we will keep working with restoring the river and restoring the coastal area outside,” Jägrud said.

Like salmon, the Atlantic sturgeon – recognisable by its pointed nose and scaleless skin – spends the first few years of its life in freshwater.

When it is large enough to tolerate salinity, it migrates to the sea in search of food and then returns to freshwater to spawn.

But it can take up to ten years for the river dweller to reproduce.

It will therefore be necessary to gradually reintroduce sturgeons every year for a decade so that they can form a population capable of surviving without human assistance, Jägrud explained.

European network

In order to map the characteristics of the river and its suitability for the species, acoustic telemetric receivers have been placed underwater and some fish fitted with transmitters to track their movements.

“These kinds of receivers are all over Europe, in European waters and also abroad,” Jägrud said.

“This means they’re all connected in the same tracking network meaning if ‘my’ fish go to Portugal or Spain or France or UK, the European tracking network will report back to me and I will know, oh, my fish released in June 2024, oh, it reached Italy,” she continued.

Spectators watching the release of the sturgeons. Photo: Adam Ihse/TT

A crowd gathered on June 18th on the shores of the Göta älv to witness the historic return.

“This is a place where very many Nordic countries had their meetings and big feasts,” said Miguel Odhner, mayor of the riverfront town Kungälv, explaining that royal guests often dined on the fish, which was caught in abundance at the time.

A sturgeon wriggles in the mayor’s hands before being plunged into the water, to the applause of the crowd.

“Now it’s time to pay back to nature,” Odhner said.

Article by AFP’s Olivier Feniet with Nioucha Zakavati in Stockholm

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CLIMATE CRISIS

Why did Sweden’s emissions drop in 2023 – and what’s in store for the future?

Sweden's greenhouse gas emissions fell by two percent last year, but the good news may be short-lived.

Why did Sweden's emissions drop in 2023 – and what's in store for the future?

In 2023, the Scandinavian country’s emissions amounted to 44.2 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent, a drop of about one tonne from 2022, according to preliminary statistics, the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency said in a statement.

The two percent decrease was in line with a 1.6 percent drop announced by Statistics Sweden in late May.

The EPA said the 2023 figure represented a decrease of 38 percent from 1990.

The EPA attributed the year-on-year drop primarily to lower emissions from industry – in particular the cement, iron and steel industries, due to lower production as a result of Sweden’s economic recession – and the electric and district heating sector, due to lower electricity prices.

“Emissions have continued to decrease, not least in industry and electric and district heating, which form part of the EU’s emissions trading system,” Anna-Karin Nyström, the head of the EPA’s climate target division said.

“The pace has slowed compared to the year before, when above all domestic transport and (fuel-based) work machinery contributed to a sharp reduction.”

But in March, an independent panel of experts tasked with reviewing climate policy said the government’s plans would lead to short-term emissions increases in 2024 and knock it off-course from its 2030 reduction target.

The Swedish Climate Policy Council, said in the March report that “policy adopted in 2023 will increase emissions and does not lead towards the fulfilment of Sweden’s climate goals and EU commitments by 2030”.

The council said several measures, such as a reduced fuel tax, put climate ambitions at risk.

But it also lamented a lack of concrete measures in the government’s “climate policy action plan”, a roadmap that the government is required by law to present every four years.

Sweden’s Minister for Climate and the Environment Romina Pourmokhtari said she was “not particularly worried” about the review’s assessments.

“They are based on the government’s policy announcements during 2023, and there are several measures that have been added since then,” Pourmokhtari said.

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