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<br />Office, Washington, <br />1982. Predicting at- <br />,es 85-88 in Forest and <br />ate. University of Min- <br />Miscellaneous Publi- <br />d D. L. Tweed. 1983. <br />esearcher-defined simi- <br />bility research. Journal <br />-262. <br />,? ec 7 o f <br />North American Journal of Fisheries Management 25:547-556, 2005 Article] <br />® Copyright by the American Fisheries Society 2005 <br />DOI: 10.15 77/M04-123.1 <br />Repatriation as a Management Strategy to Conserve a <br />Critically Imperiled Fish Species <br />PAUL C. MARSH,* BRIAN R. KESNER, AND CAROL A. PACEY <br />School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, <br />Post Office Box 874501, Tempe, Arizona 85287-4501, USA <br />Abstract.-A repatriation program to conserve critically imperiled razorback sucker Xyrauchen <br />texanus, an endemic fish of the Colorado River basin in western North America, was initiated in <br />1990. The species, once widespread and abundant, now is extirpated from most of its range because <br />of human-induced factors. Natural recruitment to wild populations rangewide is largely precluded <br />by nonnative predation. The largest remaining wild population occurs in Lake Mohave, Arizona <br />and Nevada, but its numbers have declined dramatically over the past decade, such that the genetic <br />legacy of the species may soon be lost. As part of a cooperative repatriation program, more than <br />440,000 naturally produced razorback sucker larvae were harvested and grown in protective cus- <br />tody; from these, nearly 58,000 marked juveniles were released into the lake between 1993 and <br />2002. Annual repatriate population estimates (modified Petersen method) ranged from 1,017 to <br />2,494 and poststocking survivorship (Program MARK) ranged from 2% to 6% for the period 1999- <br />2002. Total length at release was the most important determinant of poststocking survival, which <br />more than doubles for releases averaging 350 mm compared with those averaging 300 mm. Achiev- <br />ing the program goal of reestablishing an adult population of 50,000 individuals depends upon <br />increasing repatriate survival. <br />Restoring populations of extirpated species to <br />historical habitat is a fundamental strategy toward <br />recovery of imperiled taxa as diverse as wolves, <br />salmon, and condors (Bangs et al. 1998; Young <br />1999; Meretsky et al. 2000). Such efforts ideally <br />are made after removal or amelioration of threats <br />that resulted in the species elimination in the first <br />place. In other instances, the goal may be perpet- <br />uation of a vulnerable gene pool even though <br />threats remain, as in the cases of wild lake trout <br />Salvelinus namaycush in Lake Superior (Wilberg <br />et al. 2003) and the California clapper rail Rallus <br />longirostris obsoletus in central California (Har- <br />ding et al. 2001) or razorback suckers Xyrauchen <br />texanus in the Colorado River basin, the subject <br />of this paper. <br />The razorback sucker is a large, endemic big- <br />river fish of the Colorado River basin, historically <br />widespread and abundant throughout the basin, <br />ranging south from Green River, Wyoming, to the <br />Colorado River delta in northwestern Mexico <br />(Minckley 1983). The species was described as in <br />decline more than 30 years ago because field col- <br />lections generally contained only large adults <br />(Minckley 1973), and this pattern has been con- <br />sistently observed over ensuing decades (McAda <br />* Corresponding author: fish.dr@asu.edu <br />Received September 17, 2004; accepted October 18, 2004 <br />Published online May 11, 2005 <br />and Wydoski 1980; Minckley 1983; Marsh 1994; <br />Modde et al. 1996; Minckley et al. 2003). The <br />largest remaining population of razorback suckers <br />inhabits Lake Mohave, a mainstream Colorado <br />River reservoir in Arizona and Nevada (Marsh and <br />Minckley 1989; Marsh et al. 2003). Small popu- <br />lations and scattered individuals are encountered <br />elsewhere (e.g., Marsh and Minckley 1989; Modde <br />et al. 1996; Holden et al. 2001). <br />The population of razorback suckers from which <br />the Lake Mohave stock was derived historically <br />numbered in the hundreds of thousands (Minckley <br />et al. 2003), but today fewer than 3,000 individuals <br />are thought to persist (Marsh et al. 2003). Even <br />though spawning and larval production still occur, <br />juvenile recruitment is precluded by nonnative <br />predation (Marsh and Langhorst 1988; Minckley <br />et al. 1991; Marsh and Pacey 2005). Nearly 2 de- <br />cades ago, some members of the population were <br />estimated to be older than age 40 (McCarthy and <br />Minckley 1987), and without recruitment the wild <br />stock soon will be lost, and the species will not <br />be far behind. Loss of any species is tragic in itself, <br />but the unique and once abundant and wide-rang- <br />ing razorback sucker also is among the most ge- <br />netically diverse vertebrates ever studied (Dowling <br />et al. 1996a, 1996b) and, thus, represents an ir- <br />replaceable resource of both intrinsic and scientific <br />value. <br />During the 1980s, as an alternative to federal <br />547