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Almost half of European freshwater fishes at risk of extinction

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The updated European Red List of Freshwater Fishes – the most comprehensive assessment in 15 years – reveals little evidence of species recovery and calls for urgent action to protect Europe’s aquatic biodiversity.

Nearly six in ten native European freshwater fish species are now of elevated conservation concern, according to the IUCN assessment, which evaluated all 558 native species. The findings show that 42% are threatened with extinction, while an additional 18% are classified as Near Threatened.

These statistics provide a sobering remainder that all is not well with Europe’s freshwater fishes – and its wetlands. The assessment found that Europe’s freshwater fishes are significantly more threatened than those in other regions – with 42% at risk of extinction. If Europe’s freshwater wetlands are not healthy enough for fishes, they are not healthy enough for our societies and economies to flourish.

Kathy Hughes
Biodiversity Lead at Wetlands International and co-chair of the IUCN Freshwater Fish Specialist Group

Freshwater fishes are the most diverse vertebrate group on Earth and act as key indicators of ecosystem health. The deteriorating status of freshwater fishes signals broader ecosystem decline. Without urgent, coordinated action to tackle habitat loss, pollution, invasive species, and climate change, Europe risks losing a significant portion of its aquatic biodiversity within a generation.

Key findings of the European Red List

Produced through the collaboration of over 135 experts from more than 30 countries, the European Red List of Freshwater Fishes provides a scientifically rigorous, evidence-based assessment of extinction risk. The proportion of threatened species has risen by 5% since 2011, and the results show little evidence of recovery across the region.

Migratory species face particularly acute pressures. Approximately 39% of migratory freshwater fishes are declining, compared to around 14% of non-migratory species – a disparity that points to the devastating effect of barriers to fish movement such as dams and weirs.

The drivers of decline are wide-ranging and often overlapping. Habitat modification in the form of dams and other physical barriers affects 69% of assessed species, making it the most pervasive threat. Pollution impacts more than 65% of species, while invasive species affect 56%. Climate change, though already affecting 35% of species, is expected to grow as a driver in coming decades, particularly in southern Europe.

Europe’s rivers and lakes are sending a clear warning: nearly two thirds of freshwater fishes are at risk, and many show no recovery over the past 15 years. Strengthening data collection, research and evidence-based management is essential to safeguard these species and the freshwater ecosystems we all rely on.

Matthew Ford
Lead author of the report and member of the IUCN Freshwater Fish Specialist Group.

A timely resource for policy

Europe’s rivers, lakes and wetlands are among the continent’s most valuable yet most threatened ecosystems. This new European Red List of Freshwater Fishes arrives at a pivotal moment, as inland waters are finally gaining the recognition they deserve in global and European biodiversity agendas. With the recent publication of the European Water Resilience Strategy, this report offers timely guidance to help strengthen the integration of biodiversity considerations into water management and restoration efforts.

The findings provide robust scientific evidence to support the implementation of the EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030, the Nature Restoration Regulation, and the Kunming–Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Repeated Red List assessments over time provide a long-term biodiversity indicator. Improvements or declines in abundance and diversity of fish communities are also captured by biological indicators under the Water Framework Directive, but the Red List of Freshwater Fishes specifically addresses the situation species by species. Therefore, assessment under the Water Framework Directive at water body level, and the Red List of Freshwater Fishes at species level are necessary to design impactful restoration and mitigation measures.

The rapidly deteriorating conservation status of the EU’s freshwater fish is a stark warning to the European Commission, the European Parliament and Member States that now it is not the right time to weaken Europe’s environmental legislation, most notably the Water Framework and the Habitats Directives.

Chris Baker
Director, Wetlands International Europe

“Furthermore, surveys show that vast majority of European citizens expect more effective actions from their elected representatives to safeguard Europe’s rivers, wetlands and biodiversity,” added Baker.