Salmon
spawn baby trout in experiment
By
LAURAN NEERGAARD, Associated Press Writer Thu Sep 13, 7:57 PM ET
WASHINGTON
- Papa salmon plus mama salmon equals ... baby trout? Japanese researchers put
a new spin on surrogate parenting as they engineered one fish species to produce
another, in a quest to preserve endangered fish.
Idaho
scientists begin the next big step next month, trying to produce a type of salmon
highly endangered in that state the sockeye this time using more
plentiful trout as surrogate parents.
The
new method is "one of the best things that has happened in a long time in
bringing something new into conservation biology," said University of Idaho
zoology professor Joseph Cloud, who is leading the U.S. government-funded sockeye
project.
The
Tokyo University inventors dubbed their method "surrogate broodstocking."
They injected newly hatched but sterile Asian masu salmon with sperm-growing cells
from rainbow trout and watched the salmon grow up to produce trout.
The
striking success, published in Friday's edition of the journal Science, is capturing
the attention of conservation specialists, who say new techniques are badly needed.
Captive breeding of endangered fish is difficult, and attempts to freeze fish
eggs for posterity so far have failed.
"They
showed nicely that ... they produced the fish they were shooting for," said
John Waldman, a fisheries biologist at Queens College in New York.
"Future
work should look to expand this approach to other fishes in need of conservation,
in particular, the sturgeons and paddlefish," he added. "We have a lot
of species of fish around the world that are really in danger of becoming extinct."
The
Japanese researchers' ultimate goal: Boost the rapidly dwindling population of
bluefin tuna, a species prized in a country famed for its tuna appetite.
"We
need to rescue them somehow," said Goro Yoshizaki, a Tokyo University marine
scientist who is leading the research.
First,
Yoshizaki's team started with "salmonids," a family that includes both
salmon and trout, and one of concern to biologists because several species are
endangered or extinct.
Initial
attempts to transplant sperm-producing cells into normal masu salmon mostly produced
hybrids of the two species that didn't survive.
This
time, Yoshizaki engineered salmon to be sterile. He then injected newly hatched
salmon with stem cells destined to grow into sperm that he had culled from male
rainbow trout.
Once
they were grown, 10 of 29 male salmon who got the injections produced trout sperm,
called milt.
Here's
the bigger surprise: Injecting the male cells into female salmon sometimes worked,
too, prompting five female salmon to ovulate trout eggs. That's a scientific first,
Yoshizaki said.
The
stem cells were still primitive enough to switch gears from sperm-producers to
egg-producers when they wound up inside female organs, explained Idaho's Cloud.
Then
Yoshizaki used the salmon-grown trout sperm to fertilize both wild trout eggs
and the salmon-grown trout eggs. DNA testing confirmed that all of the dozens
of resulting baby fish were pure trout, he reported.
Moreover,
those new trout grew up able to reproduce.
Those
first experiments, funded by a Japanese research institute, used still fairly
plentiful species to develop the technique. Now comes Idaho's attempt to prove
if the method is really useful in trying to produce the endangered sockeye salmon.
Last
January, Yoshizaki helped University of Idaho scientists collect and freeze immature
sperm tissue from young sockeye salmon being raised at a state-run hatchery. Next
month, he'll be back to help Cloud thaw the tissue and implant it into sterile
rainbow trout.
In
Japan, Yoshizaki is focused on bluefin tuna, noting that standard "marine
ranching" techniques are difficult for tuna that can reach man-size.
He
has begun experiments into how to produce baby tuna from mackerel, which are nearly
a thousand times smaller than adult tuna. If it works, "we can save space,
cost and labor," he predicted in an e-mail interview.