SALMON could completely disappear from Welsh rivers in the next few decades, according to a new report – with the Usk one of the worst affected.

A new report commissioned by Natural Resources Wales has some stark findings for the future of salmon populations.

The Identification and Characterisation of Small Salmon Populations to Support their Conservation and Management Evidence report looks at the decline of salmon, and sea trout, populations across Wales and considers whether and when they may become critically small, in order to support their conservation and management.

The report confirms that Atlantic salmon are under threat not only in Wales but throughout most of its range but suggests that salmon may disappear completely from many Welsh rivers within the next few decades.

The report says: “The slope of the decline varies significantly between rivers, being particularly steep in the rivers Usk, Teifi and Rheidol.

It adds that, “Salmon may become extirpated (%CL= 0) from most Welsh rivers within two decades.

Ben Wilson, Principal Fisheries Officer for NRW, said: “Atlantic salmon and sea trout in Wales are declining at unprecedented rates and, in many areas, are currently below sustainable biological limits.

“Forecasts that small populations are at risk of extinction are deeply concerning, although uncertainty about the scale and location of any such extinctions remains high and some populations remain relatively stable.

“Climate change is the most likely cause of a decline in salmon numbers.

Changing ocean conditions mean poor marine survival is affecting all populations, and higher river temperatures in winter and summer affect spawning and juvenile survival in many Welsh rivers.

“Local impacts such as water and habitat quality also have an adverse effect on fish numbers as evidenced by the variation in neighbouring populations.”

Despite the report’s dire warnings there is evidence in Wales and further afield that, even where salmon and sea trout populations have been severely depleted, stocks have recovered when limiting factors are removed or reduced.

Although no fixed threshold exists below which recovery is impossible, the longer populations remain below the safe limits; the less likely recovery will be.

The report emphasises that restoring connectivity and improvements the quantity and quality of available habitats are the best ways to support and restore runs of fish.

Ben added: “Although this report confirms many of our fears, there is still hope that by working together, we will be able to turn this situation around.

As David Attenborough says, ‘Never has there been a more important time to invest in out wildlife’.

“The history of salmon in the British Isles and elsewhere has examples of populations that have recovered from very low population size, or even from complete extinction once the constraining factors are lifted.

“To do this we need greater understanding of how and why populations decline and recover and provide practical advice on what to do when populations become critically low.

“The decline is salmon numbers is a clear example of the loss of biodiversity which is fuelling the Welsh nature emergency.

“We must build a broad coalition across all sectors and institutions to embed pro-nature thinking and delivery in everything we do to help reassemble and reinvigorate the ecosystems we all depend upon.”

Speaking to the Chronicle last year rivers champion Tiggy Pettifer (pictured) pre-empted the findings of the report “If we carry on the way we are going we will lose the Usk in ten years.

There will be nothing at all left in it and the affects will be felt by everyone in the area,” she said.

Her words came in the wake of a Natural Resources Wales (NRW) report, which found that the River Usk had the highest incidence of phosphate pollution in all the Welsh rivers.

“They say that salmon are the canaries of the sea and that if all is well with the salmon, then all is well elsewhere.

Well I can tell you that all is not well with the salmon in the Usk,” said Tiggy, who not only teaches fly fishing at her Glanusk home, but also works as a fundraiser for the Atlantic Salmon Trust.

“In the 1980s there were thousands of salmon caught in the Usk; last year it was down to being hundreds, which just shows how the stocks are being depleted thanks to pollution.”

“Salmon is a keystone species as so many other residents of the river, like insects, otters and even plants, depend on them to thive and even survive,” said Mrs Pettifer.