mountain mullet

Go underwater into the overlooked world of freshwater animals

Freshwater makes up less than three percent of Earth’s water supply but is home to almost half of all fish species.

Puerto Rican mountain mullet reside in El Yunque National Forest. Known to the locals as dajao, these athletic fish can journey to high elevations and even jump over small waterfalls.

Photograph by David Herasimtschuk, Freshwaters Illustrated
ByMelissa Suran
Photographs byDavid Herasimtschuk
January 08, 2019
9 min read
A version of this story appears in the October 2019 issue of National Geographic magazine.

Although freshwater environments, from creeks to rivers, brim with more than 10,000 species of fish, we may never get the chance to see many of these mysterious creatures as their populations decline. Currently, more than 20 percent of known species are imperiled or already extinct. That’s why David Herasimtschuk doesn’t just photograph fish for fun; he’s a professional photographer dedicated to raising awareness and appreciation of freshwater environments and the wildlife that live in them.

Tennessee Dace
saffron and Tennessee shiners
brook trout
bluegill and crayfish
a Pacific giant salamander
Oregon spotted frogs
a hellbender salamander
a musk turtle
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Tennessee dace turn vibrant colors when they breed. They are listed as vulnerable to extinction, and some localized populations have disappeared entirely.
Photograph by David Herasimtschuk, Freshwaters Illustrated

“There's all this life that's disappearing, and nobody even knows it’s there,” Herasimtschuk says.

Herasimtschuk is the photographer and cinematographer for Freshwaters Illustrated, an Oregon-based nonprofit that seeks to educate the public about freshwater ecosystems and inspire people to protect them. For almost a decade, he’s worked with Freshwaters Illustrated to document creek and river life across North America, from the mountains of Colorado to El Yunque National Forest in Puerto Rico. These environments not only are habitats for a range of aquatic plants and animals, but they support a whole web of terrestrial wildlife too, from the birds that nest in riparian areas or stop over on migrations to animals like beavers that use rivers for travel to predators who eat river-dwelling creatures.

Rivers are also primary sources of drinking water for humans. They control flooding; they provide irrigation for crops; they’re harnessed for hydropower. Despite the critical role they play for both humans and in nature, they’re often overlooked.

“People know more about a clown fish in the coral reef than a minnow that lives 10 minutes from their house,” Herasimtschuk says. “You're essentially exposing people to a whole new world, but it's a world that a lot of times is right in their own backyard.”

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UNIQUE BEHAVIORS

Several places that Herasimtschuk has photographed, such as southern Appalachia, harbor some of the most diverse freshwater ecosystems in the world. The region sustains roughly 300 to 400 native species of fish.

Southern Appalachia is also home to Herasimtschuk’s favorite amphibian: the hellbender, a giant aquatic salamander native to North America. Herasimtschuk says that if you patiently linger around these two-foot long salamanders, they’ll eventually interact with you and “accept you into their world.” That’s how he captured what may be the only photograph of a hellbender attempting to eat a snake, which earned Herasimtschuk a Wildlife Photographer of the Year award from the Natural History Museum in London. The scene was unexpected, as hellbenders tend to hunt for smaller prey. When the snake tightened around the salamander’s head, the hellbender tried to reposition its bite, giving the northern water snake the chance to escape. (Read more: Inside the fight to save the hellbender.)

a hellbender

This giant salamander, known as a hellbender, hopes to make a northern water snake its next meal. Herasimtschuk says this photograph may be the first of a hellbender attempting to eat a snake.

Photograph by David Herasimtschuk, Freshwaters Illustrated
rough-skinned newts

Every winter, rough-skinned newts visit the same pond in Oregon’s Willamette River to mate. Eight years and thousands of photographs later, Herasimtschuk finally captured “the perfect newt image.”

Photograph by David Herasimtschuk, Freshwaters Illustrated
longnose gar

Longnose gar are ancient fish that haven’t changed much since prehistoric times. A female gar ready to spawn is followed by a group of male gar hoping to fertilize her pea-sized eggs—all 30,000 of them.

Photograph by David Herasimtschuk, Freshwaters Illustrated

Through his lens, Herasimtschuk has witnessed many rarely seen behaviors, like shiner minnows and Tennessee dace transform into a spectacle of color when they spawn. He’s seen a river chub spend days searching for suitable rocks to build a nursery. He’s swum among longnose gar, ancestral fish that he says resemble “underwater dinosaurs,” and watched a female gar lay 30,000 pea-sized eggs—some of which stuck to his camera. And it took him eight years and thousands of attempts to properly document rough-skinned newts congregating to mate in Oregon’s Willamette River.

buffalo fish

Following spring rainstorms, thousands of buffalo fish migrate from the main stem of the Tennessee River to smaller creeks. Within a few days of arriving, the buffalo fish inundate the creeks with their eggs. Many fish species, including buffalo, need dam-free water in order to navigate their migration routes.

Photograph by David Herasimtschuk, Freshwaters Illustrated

IN THE RAIN

Weather conditions can significantly impact how long it takes to capture the perfect moment. Many freshwater species spawn in elevated areas during spring and winter, so Herasimtschuk can easily spend eight to 10 hours in frigid water while he snaps hundreds of pictures.

He says he can handle the cold in his dry suit, but if it rains, the photo shoot comes to an end. In the world of freshwater photography, precipitation is both a friend and foe. For example, rain attracts salmon, as it helps them move upstream. But it also turns the water into a murky abyss. It’s not the rain itself that creates the haze but rather the pollution that drains into the water during a storm.

lake sturgeon

Every spring, thousands of lake sturgeon migrate from Wisconsin’s Lake Winnebago to their spawning waters in Wolf River. Oftentimes, a male sturgeon will strike a female sturgeon with his powerful tail to force her into releasing eggs. These massive fish can grow more than six feet long and live for 150 years.

Photograph by David Herasimtschuk, Freshwaters Illustrated
a Pacific lamprey

Although an open-jawed lamprey may look terrifying, it’s not interested in attacking humans. They can climb up 40-foot waterfalls by thrusting themselves upward using their muscular, snake-like bodies and grabbing onto higher ledges with their suction mouths. This one is actually suctioning onto Herasimtschuk’s camera.

Photograph by David Herasimtschuk, Freshwaters Illustrated

“When you see this water that looks like chocolate milk coming into a creek, you really get a sense of how that could smother creatures,” Herasimtschuk says. The EPA actually calls sediment the most common pollutant in rivers and lakes—about a third is from natural erosion, but the majority is from erosion that’s been accelerated by human activity, such as construction.

Despite the demanding nature of his work, Herasimtschuk persists, because one day, documenting these animals may no longer be possible. Dams make it difficult for certain species to travel along critical migration routes, and issues like sedimentation and pollution destroy their habitats. Herasimtschuk has even seen discarded car batteries decomposing in a river and federally protected areas littered with trash.

an arctic grayling

Male arctic grayling raise their butterfly-like dorsal fins to signal that they’re willing to compete for the right to spawn. The biggest male grayling will eventually defeat his smaller opponents and fertilize the eggs of female grayling that enter his domain.

Photograph by David Herasimtschuk, Freshwaters Illustrated

This isn’t just a problem for aquatic life; it’s a red flag for humans, too. Animals such as hellbenders are barometers of river health. Their presence in a river is a good sign that the water is clean and drinkable. But hellbenders are beginning to disappear, as are several other animals in Herasimtschuk’s photographs. Nevertheless, he hopes that his images will educate people and compel them to care.

“Many of these species have been around for millions of years, and it's only in the last hundred that they've started to vanish,” Herasimtschuk says.

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