Our Mission: Protect and Restore
Mongolia's Native Fish Species

Natural Fish Breeding is a non-profit organization dedicated to the conservation and restoration of Mongolia's native freshwater fish species. We operate across multiple river basins, coordinating field research, hatchery programs, and community-based conservation initiatives to protect species facing critical decline and prevent their extinction.

Our primary goal is to reverse the decline of endangered fish populations through science-led breeding programs, habitat protection, and partnerships with local communities. Native fish are not just residents of rivers — they are essential to keeping them alive. Research shows that salmonids like taimen cycle vital nutrients through the food web[1], their spawning activity aerates riverbeds and prevents sediment buildup[2], and as apex predators they regulate algal growth that would otherwise deplete oxygen levels[3]. When native fish disappear, rivers lose the biological processes that maintain water quality and ecological balance — accelerating degradation across the entire watershed[4]. We oversee regional projects including Chuluut Tul and Ilenkh, each focused on critical waterways and the species that sustain them.

Meet the Team | Meet the Fish

Where It All Began...

Mongolia's rivers were once home to thriving populations of taimen, lenok, grayling, and other native species now at serious risk of decline. But over the past several decades, these fish have been disappearing at an alarming rate. According to IUCN assessments, Siberian taimen populations have declined by approximately 50% over the past three generations. Mongolia's 2026 Red List reassessment — the first comprehensive update in nineteen years — identified sixteen threatened fish species across the country. Near urban centers and downstream of mining operations, taimen have virtually disappeared entirely.

The Chuluut River basin in Arkhangai Province became a turning point. Local herders and anglers noticed that the taimen — the world's largest salmonid, a species that once defined these waters — were vanishing. Fewer fish returned each spawning season. Stretches of river that had been abundant for generations fell silent.

In response, a small group of conservationists, scientists, and community members came together with a shared goal: to stop the decline before it became irreversible. Natural Fish Breeding was founded to coordinate conservation efforts across Mongolia's most critical river systems — combining field research, hatchery science, and the knowledge of the people who have lived alongside these rivers for centuries.

How We Work

Our conservation programs operate directly in the field — across river basins, hatchery stations, and local communities. We conduct population surveys, monitor spawning sites, and run breeding programs designed to strengthen wild populations of taimen, lenok, and other endangered species.

Each regional project — Chuluut Tul on the Chuluut River, Ilenkh in its own watershed — is tailored to the unique ecology of its river system. We train local teams, share data across projects, and work with government agencies to shape policy that protects Mongolia's freshwater heritage.

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