Climate Change has Surprising Effect on Endangered Naked Carp; 'Metabolic Holiday' 
By Chris M. Wood US Source: Underwatertimes 12/19/2006

A groundbreaking study reveals an unanticipated way freshwater fish may respond to water diversion and climate change. Endangered naked carp migrate annually between freshwater rivers, where they spawn, and a lake in Western China, where they feed and grow. However, Lake Qinghai is drying up and becoming increasingly more saline--leading to surprising adjustments to the carps' metabolic rate.

Naked carp take seven to ten years to reach reproductive size. Although historically abundant, overfishing and destruction of spawning habitat through dam-building caused the species to become endangered during the 1990s. Diversion of water for agriculture from the lake has been compounded by climate change, leading to a decline in water level in the lake of 10–12 cm per year during the past fifty years (see accompanying image).
 

However, Chris M. Wood (McMaster University) and coauthors found that naked carp respond to the increased salinity of the lake water in a surprising way--by taking a "metabolic holiday." In the first forty-eight hours after transitioning from the freshwater river system to lake water, the carps' oxygen consumption falls --eventually reaching just 60 percent of that in river fish.

Both gill and kidney functions also decline. The sodium/potassium pump (Na+/K+-ATPase), which is a protein critical for cellular function, operated at only 30 percent of its capacity in lake-water fish compared to river-water fish. Ammonia-N secretion by the kidneys declines by a surprising 70 percent, and urine flow decreases drastically to less than 5 percent of its rate in the freshwater river water.

 
Qinghai Lake naked carp Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4176Cod and haddock demand 'exceeds UK sea supply'BBC News2012-08-21UK
4177Penis-eating fish attacks 3 boys in southern VietnamTN News2021-04-09VN
4178North American Fish Extinctions May Double By 2050; '877 Times Faster Than The Fossil Record'underwatertimes2012-08-11US
4179B.C. fish farms to kill 300,000 salmonCTV British Columbia2012-08-09CA
4180Not so slippery customer! The 5ft2in girl who took on a 7ft catfish - and wondailymail2012-08-08UK
4181Southern California waters are teeming with Mola molaspetethomasoutdoors2012-08-08US
4182Warm water results in small fish kill in Barriere River tributaryclearwatertimes2015-07-25CA
4183Морская звезда-робот поможет изучать глубины океанаhightech2021-04-09RU
4184Fishing kids haul in succulent seafood from the deep as parents watch onstuff2021-03-22NZ
4185Fish leaps out of a bowl of water on pavement before flip-flopping down road and into a drain in extraordinary getawaydailymail2021-03-23UK
4186Scientists to spend $450,000 on bait for halibut surveythe arctic sounder2012-08-03CA
4187Fatal virus found in more B.C. salmon farmsCTVNews2012-08-03CA
4188Scientists discover new species of 'blind snake' in Brazilian river that looks remarkably like a piece of the human anatomydailymail2012-08-01UK
4189Deadly Salmon Virus In Canadian Freshwater Fish; 'A Major Concern For B.c.'s Salmon'Underwatertimes2012-07-19CA
4190Infected salmon will not be eaten by humansCBC News2012-07-17CA
4191Report says Asian carp could reach all 5 Great Lakes in 20 yearsChicago Tribune2012-07-12US
4192That Salmon on Your Plate Might Have Been a Vegetariannytimes2021-03-24US
4193New study triples estimate of red snapper in Gulf of MexicoAJC2021-03-24US
4194'Distant cousin' of Covid-19 virus found in threatened NZ fishnzherald2021-03-25NZ
4195Tiny chip tracks fish movementsCBC News2012-07-09CA
4196Families warned to stay out of popular rural lake after discovery of deadly fish 'that eats male genitals'dailymail2012-07-07UK
4197Copper in water makes salmon vulnerableScience News2012-07-10US
4198CNY Outdoors Angler’s tale: ‘I caught a 14 1/2- inch goldfish in Onondaga Lake with my fly rod’syracuse2021-03-29US
41991 dead, another presumed dead after fishing boat capsizes off Cape Breton coastCBC News2021-04-04CA
4200Zoologger: The fish with its genitals on its headnewscientist2012-07-05VN

215 216 217 167 of [218 - pages.]