Reintroduction of white-clawed crayfish in Basel-Landschaft
Keystone-SDA
Select your language
Generated with artificial intelligence.
Listening: Endangered crayfish reintroduced to Swiss rivers
Two researchers at the University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland (FHNW) have bred white-clawed crayfish and reintroduced the highly endangered species to the wild.
This content was published on
2 minutes
Keystone-SDA
Français
fr
Réintroduction d’écrevisses à pattes blanches à Bâle-Campagne
Original
The young crayfish serve as food for fish and other aquatic organisms, Raphael Krieg, who initiated the project with Armin Zenker, told Keystone-ATS. Just after hatching, crayfish are barely a centimetre long. Protected breeding makes it possible to overcome this perilous phase of life.
Egg-bearing females were collected in spring from the Lisselle, a tributary of the Birs, and brought to the FHNW breeding facility. Once the young had hatched, the mothers were returned to the Lisselle.
Protected rearing took place in a facility with specially prepared water and controlled feeding. The aim was to set up a breeding station for white-clawed crayfish in the Birs watershed.
The Lisselle is home to a large population of white-clawed crayfish, making it ideally suited to the project. But two years ago, an unknown event led to the death of many crayfish, explain the researchers.
Reintroduction, they believe, will strengthen this population. Despite its proximity to residential areas, many stretches of the Lisselle provide a good environment for crayfish.
The white-clawed crayfish is one of Switzerland’s four native crayfish species. Considered a bioindicator of water quality, it is under serious threat from habitat destruction, pollution and American crayfish, an invasive species introduced to Europe in the 1970s for culinary reasons.
Translated from German by DeepL/mga
This news story has been written and carefully fact-checked by an external editorial team. At SWI swissinfo.ch we select the most relevant news for an international audience and use automatic translation tools such as DeepL to translate it into English. Providing you with automatically translated news gives us the time to write more in-depth articles.
If you want to know more about how we work, have a look here, if you want to learn more about how we use technology, click here, and if you have feedback on this news story please write to english@swissinfo.ch.
Popular Stories
More
Climate adaptation
Why Switzerland is among the ten fastest-warming countries in the world
Train vs plane: would you take a direct train between London and Geneva?
Eurostar is planning to run direct trains from Britain to Germany and Switzerland from the early 2030s. Would you favour the train over the plane? If not, why not?
Gotthard traffic queue hits 11km at start of holiday season
This content was published on
The start of the summer holidays saw a long traffic jam in front of the Gotthard tunnel on Saturday. Traffic jams between Erstfeld and Göschenen in canton Uri were up to 11 kilometres long early in the morning.
This content was published on
The water temperature of the Rhine River could rise by up to 4.2° degrees Celsius by the end of the century due to the warming planet, scientists warn.
This content was published on
The Federal Council wants to explore the possibilities of joining the European Union’s €800-billion rearmament programme without compromising Swiss neutrality.
Defence Minister Pfister stresses importance of Swiss mission in Balkans
This content was published on
During a visit to the Balkans region last week, Swiss Defence Minister Martin Pfister met Swisscoy peacekeeping troops in Kosovo.
Premiere for Swiss Air Force on French National Day
This content was published on
On July 14, the Swiss Air Force will take part in the traditional air parade in Paris to mark the French bank holidays with an F/A-18 fighter jet. This is a first for Switzerland.
Swiss launch competition for memorial to Nazi victims
This content was published on
The victims of Nazi Germany are to be commemorated on the Casinoterrasse in Bern. A competition will be held to determine what the site will look like.
This content was published on
The cantonal police of Graubünden in eastern Switzerland have arrested and convicted five cocaine dealers in Chur within a week.
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.