An Entirely Synthetic Fish: How Rainbow Trout Beguiled America and Overran the World by Anders Halverson
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Sometime within the past ten years or so I became interested in native fish. I have nothing against any species, I just like to see fish that are “supposed” to be in a watershed, in that watershed, not some other species occupying that water. This desire to find native species in their native range has taken my fishing buddy and me to some out-of-the-way little creeks—we’re talking about places in the middle of the desert 100 miles from the nearest town. Creeks whose widths are measured in inches, not feet. But it doesn’t seem to matter where we go, how far away from “civilization” we get, we still come across water stocked with non-native species. Many of these places were stocked long before motorized travel was possible. And I’ve wondered what possessed people to stock fish in such places.
Anders Halverson’s new book, An Entirely Synthetic Fish: How Rainbow Trout Beguiled America and Overran the World, answers that question for me. In a fascinating look at the social and political maneuverings of the late nineteenth century through the present, Anders’ meticulous research lays bare some interesting tidbits of the stocking policies of the United States.
One such gem is that the government was worried about the strength of the nation’s men: that they had “notoriously less hardihood and endurance than the generation which preceded [their:] own” (George Perkins Marsh, congressman and diplomat from the mid-1800’s). This description was given in a report by Marsh under the auspices of the Legislature of Vermont on the Artificial Propagation of Fish. He further stated that “the sports of the chase” (angling being one of them) was a way to increase the hardiness of the Americans. At this time, many waterways were already seeing a decline in fish numbers and the artificial propagation of fish was seen as a way to increase those numbers. With the urge to increase the robustness of its men, and the decline fish population the underpinnings were there for the introduction of non-native species.
Last year Eccles (from the Turning Over Small Stones blog) and I had a discussion about the terms “Fish and Game” and “Fish and Wildlife” as used in various agencies: Why were the terms “fish” and “game” separate? Shouldn’t it just be Game or Wildlife, as in “Utah Game” or “US Wildlife Service” since fish are a type of game and fish are a type of wildlife? Anders informs us that by the 1870s congress formed the United States Fish Commission to help tackle the problem of declining fish stocks, thus becoming the first governmental agency involved with animal husbandry in the US. At a later time, the “game” and “wildlife” were added as the agency expanded. So, in my mind at least, this solves the mystery.
How the rainbow trout became the darling of the US Fish Commission, and just about every other angling agency in the world, is an interesting tale that Anders starts in San Francisco in 1872 with Livingston Stone looking for spawning salmon. He eventually found the McCloud River and began propagating salmon. By 1879 they were looking for a place on the McCloud to begin propagating trout as well. And they did, with astounding success.
Besides the historical ventures Anders skillfully and delightfully takes the reader on, he also dissects the biology of the stocking programs, covering the hardiness of a stock that is constantly used for breeding to whirling disease. He discusses the loss of native species and the response (or lack of it) of individual state fish and game departments, how some of them have switched from stocking to conservation.
This brings up an interesting problem that many fish and game departments need to tackle: what is their responsibility when sportsmen (who pay for licenses whose money is then possibly used to bankroll conservation and restoration instead of stocking), clamor for more catchable fish?
Through all of these topics Anders uses a reporters zeal for facts (there are approximately 475 sources listed in the bibliography) and detachment, thereby keeping an even keel on reporting the facts and not stepping on a soapbox to expound one particular side over another. Even with this professional detachment, there is a keen sense of understanding and compassion shown for the stories he tells. For, if nothing else (but there is a lot of “else”), the book is full of stories told with the storyteller’s art.
Full Disclosure: I have corresponded with Anders a few times by email. I was one of the first couple of anglers to join his new website (*). And when he said he had a book available to be reviewed, I asked for a copy. I don’t have anything to profit from this review except getting a free book. Which I already have.
Purchase the book (links from Anders’ website).
Check out the “Additional Materials” on Anders’ website.
Here is a review from Dave B at Native Trout Angler.
Another review, this one from Sam Snyder and posted on MidCurrent.
Newspaper piece from ColoradoDaily.com.
Information from Yale University Press (publishers of the book).
* This website is Angler’s Life List and Native Fish Network (ALLNFN). A big congratulations to the site for making it into the March 2010 edition of Outside Magazine’s Editors’ Choice top 51 things to do (“For our inaugural list, we’ve gathered 51 of our favorite things into a rollicking compendium of capital ideas, sublime destinations, brilliant equipment, and more.”). ALLNFN came in at #42!







Nice review Scot. I’d be interested on his take of how the McCloud River rainbows got stocked in the Delaware. The story is the train broke down and they dumped the fish in the river to save them. I am not crazy about invasive species, but I am glad the hard-fighting rainbows are in the Delaware!
Bob,
It’s just amazing the places they stocked fish. There is also the story of the Pyramid Lake Lahontan cuttthroats (I think it’s them) that were traveling through Utah by train (sounds like they were regular passengers, but it was in containers of water). The train had a problem and they dumped them in a creek by the Nevada/Utah border. A century later they were used to repopulate Pyramid Lake. So the train incident on the Delaware could easily be that. Or, somebody just wanted to have rainbows there so they stocked them.
Scott,
I particularly liked the parts about the early aerial stocking techniques and the Green River rotenone project (or debacle).
Anders Halverson, PhD deserves to get an “A” for this effort. By the way, I am still cruising his footnotes.
Ray
Ray, Those were interesting stories. I found the aerial stocking fascinating as well. I always wondered about that and the mortality rate of the fish hitting the water. The Green River episode is particularly disturbing, but I wouldn’t be surprised if something like that could happen again (the cynic in me). Those notes/bibliography are pretty amazing: he did some major research on that book.