Lawrence Breakspear
Senior Member
The 2018 Barbel Show in June, Cattie the river Teme PHD student who was sponsored by the Barbel Society, the EA and the Severn rivers trust gave an update of her study of barbel numbers in teme, and in conclusion she stated, that as the Teme as an SSI, her study has shown, there are no water quality issues on the Teme, no habitat issues, no lack of suitable spawning sites and no abstraction issues that would affect the barbels ability to thrive. So that leaves one thing, as I have been saying for years PREDATION.
This points to Cormorants, Meganzers and our Apex friend the Otter, the Otters effect on the Temes barbel, Chub, Bream and Pike population has been catastrophic, the Barbel has suffered the most because the way the Otter targets the larger slower females, the egg producers, when an Otter takes a 10 pound barbel, it doesn't take a good fish its takes 150,000 eggs out of the system every year that barbel may have lived for, before it was killed.
As I have always said, it doesnt matter how clean, how perfect your river is, without a broodstock of barbel the species has little chance, with the average ratio of male barbel to female being 7 to 1 in most rivers, and the fact that males live shorter lives than the females you can see how a barbel population can collapse very quickly, almost a season to season event if most of the females are lost to predation, the Teme, the Bristol Avon and the Kennett are good examples of this. This time of year is when the Barbel is at its most vulnerable as they move to more to shallower areas, tributaries and weir pools to spawn, these area become the killing fields for the Otter, the damage is immeasurable.
This points to Cormorants, Meganzers and our Apex friend the Otter, the Otters effect on the Temes barbel, Chub, Bream and Pike population has been catastrophic, the Barbel has suffered the most because the way the Otter targets the larger slower females, the egg producers, when an Otter takes a 10 pound barbel, it doesn't take a good fish its takes 150,000 eggs out of the system every year that barbel may have lived for, before it was killed.
As I have always said, it doesnt matter how clean, how perfect your river is, without a broodstock of barbel the species has little chance, with the average ratio of male barbel to female being 7 to 1 in most rivers, and the fact that males live shorter lives than the females you can see how a barbel population can collapse very quickly, almost a season to season event if most of the females are lost to predation, the Teme, the Bristol Avon and the Kennett are good examples of this. This time of year is when the Barbel is at its most vulnerable as they move to more to shallower areas, tributaries and weir pools to spawn, these area become the killing fields for the Otter, the damage is immeasurable.