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
1226Leading UK chefs join campaign to cast farmed salmon off menutheguardian2023-10-14UK
1227Osakis fisherman loses runaway walleye during photo opechopress2023-10-20CA
1228Plan for water cuts from 3 Western states is enough to protect Colorado RiverThe Associated Press2023-10-25US
1229Tsleil-Waututh’s race to save salmon habitat in drought stricken southwest B.C.coastalnewstoday2023-10-20CA
1230Alleged salmon price-fixing scheme prompts $5.2M Canadian settlementvancouverisawesome2023-10-20CA
1231The Ausable River's fish died in droves in July.CBC News2023-10-12CA
1232Reaping the rewards of a move from agri- to aqua-culturethefishsite2023-10-20IN
1233‘It smells so bad’: glut of wild salmon creates stink in Norway and Finlandtheguardian2023-10-02UK
1234Estonia's national fish stock fell by half even while adhering to quotaerr2023-10-04EE
1235Invasive spiny water flea found in Lake Winnipesaukee for first time evermasslive2023-10-01US
1236Fisherman loses runaway walleye during photo op and makes miraculous catchechopress2023-10-20US
1237Illegal fishing plagues Omani coastal citiesmuscatdaily2023-10-07OM
1238A young leader fights for Yukon River salmon, her community – and herselfalaskapublic2023-10-03US
1239North Carolina angler's colorful puddingwife catch may set world recordfoxweather2023-10-03US
1240Canada’s DFO confronts Native fishermennationalfisherman2023-10-19CA
1241US Women's Fly Fishing Team Wins Bronze Medal at 2023einnews2023-10-19US
1242Хитрый лещohotniki2023-10-10RU
1243State seeks $27.6 million from southern Oregon dam operatorsOregon Capital Chronicle2023-10-08US
1244Researchers in Japan Find Tritium Does Not Accumulate in FishThe Yomiuri Shimbun2023-10-05JP
1245Why Does Canada Have So Many Lakes?southwestjournal2023-10-16CA
1246Canada to help monitor vessels illegally fishing in PH watersCNN Philippines2023-10-17CA
1247Canada to help Philippines track illegal fishingfoxnews2023-10-16CA
1248Frisch: Find the green, find the fishechopress2023-10-13US
1249future of rivers as invasive fish continue to proliferate.fishncanada2023-10-11CA
1250Monster 283-pound alligator gar caught in Texas could set two fishing recordsFox News2023-10-11US

214 215 216 49 of [217 - pages.]