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Saving the endangered Mary River cod a dangerous occupation, but a labour of love

They are aggressive, territorial, have a violent sex life and can deliver a nasty bite to the people trying to save them, but the fighting spirit of the endangered Mary River cod is helping bring the species back from the brink of extinction.

The fiery freshwater cod was one of the reasons why, in 2009, former Federal Environment minister Peter Garrett rejected the controversial Traveston Dam proposal in the farming catchment of Queensland's Mary River.

It is estimated that numbers dipped as dangerously low as 600 in the wild, due to habitat clearing and overfishing.

But in 1983, one of the nation's pioneers of aquaculture, Gerry Cook, got together with mates to start a Mary River cod captive breeding program that continues to this day.

The Mary River Catchment Coordinating Committee (MRCCC) now manages the Gerry Cook fish hatchery on the shores of Lake MacDonald in the Noosa hinterland.

Over the decades more than 500,000 fingerlings have been released back into the wild between the Gold Coast, west to Toowoomba and north to Maryborough.

Fiercely territorial fish

Darren Knowles juggles fire fighting with managing the fish hatchery and laughed when it was suggested he should be paid danger money for both of his careers.

He receives a very unwelcome reception when it comes time to collect the eggs laid on removable fly screens in pipes in a pond, for transfer to tanks in the hatchery.

"To get the eggs out you have to actually dive down with snorkel and put your head up a pipe and have a look and unfortunately the male, he's only doing his job, will come out and try and bite you on the leg," Mr Knowles said.

"When you've got a face mask on, it fills up and you come up coughing and spluttering like no tomorrow but it's one of the exciting parts of the job."

Dad does the parenting

In the wild, the female Mary River cod lays her eggs in the males' hidden home below a fallen log or a shaded, undercut creek bank.

The male then assumes all responsibility for guarding and raising their offspring.

But relationships between the sexes of the endangered species are far from a caring 'roses and chocolates' romance.

"They are a very aggressive and territorial fish, so unfortunately the female of the species has a bit of a hard time around breeding time," Mr Knowles said.

"She comes out and she's got bite marks on her."

The MRCCC is seeking funding to determine the success of the hatchery's restocking program.

The Mary River cod is a no-take species in all waters except a very small list of stocked dams.

They're totally off limits during the spawning season — from September to the start of December — because, even if the males are caught and released, they will abandon their young.

Impacts of climate change

MRCCC administration and event coordinator, Debbie Seal, said it was critical that anglers gave the species a break.

"They stay in the same place. The cod will find a hole or an undercut bank or a log and they'll make that their home and they'll stay in that area 98 per cent of the time and they only leave to feed and breed," Ms Seal said.

"We've had situations in recent years where there's been extended droughts and a landholder contacted us to tell us about the one surviving pool in the creek and six large cod were in that pool because it was the only habitat left.

"That landholder took it upon himself to put his pump into the pool to aerate it for the cod and he managed to keep all but one of those fish alive until such time as it finally did rain a month later."

In 17 years of working for the MRCCC, Ms Seal has helped dozens of teams of volunteers release the hatchlings into suitable shady habitat.

"It's really exciting but it's mingled with sadness because you know they're not all going to survive," she said.