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
1251Red drum RAS is ready to roll in Floridathefishsite2023-10-11US
1252Новости рыболовов Беларусиohotniki2023-10-05BY
1253Taiwan blocks 18,000 kg of Japanese fish due to excessive chemicalsfocustaiwan2023-09-26TW
1254‘Too hot’ for salmon: How climate change is contributing to the Yukon salmon collapsealaskapublic2023-09-26US
1255NT government urged to reform barramundi laws to protect lucrative recreational fishing industryabc2023-09-26AU
1256Canada has an inconsistent stance on fish farms - why?nationalobserver2023-10-10CA
1257DNR seeks comment on proposed Thief Lake WMA management plan updateechopress2023-10-10US
1258Over 40,000 Rainbow Trout to be Stocked in Area Waters in Octoberbigcountrynewsconnection2023-09-30US
1259Biden Directs all Federal Agencies to Work Toward Restoring Wild Salmonbigcountrynewsconnection2023-09-27US
1260Two anglers land penalties of almost £1,200 for fishing illegallyEnvironment Agency2023-09-28UK
1261New Brunswick group drops attempt to eradicate invasive fish in Miramichi watershedthestar2023-09-29CA
1262CT trawl crew finds rare giant stingray, large predatory fish in Long Island SoundHartford Courant2023-09-29US
1263Осенние настроения линяohotniki2023-10-02RU
1264Thousands of salmon escaped an Icelandic fish farm.theguardian2023-09-30UK
1265Chinese still fish near Japan after water release from Fukushimaasahi.com2023-09-25CN
1266The silver lining to storm surge: How some baby fish ride out hurricanes to successSouth Florida Sun Sentinel2023-09-25US
1267Responding to the loneliness and anxiety of our daydenisonforum2023-09-29US
1268What’s the carbon footprint of owning pet fish? An expert explainstheconversation2023-09-26UK
1269Drought in Brazil’s Amazon is sharpening fears for the futureThe Associated Press2023-10-08BR
1270Сарган в Белом море - свой среди чужихohotniki2023-10-01RU
1271Egypt's tilapia hatchery pioneerthefishsite2023-10-06EG
1272Biden Memo Directs US Agencies to Restore 'Healthy and Abundant' Salmon RunsAssociated Press2023-10-05US
1273За горбачами-разбойникамиohotniki2023-09-29RU
1274MDC virtual program on Oct. 17 to focus on muskie fishingeinnews2023-10-06US
1275Frisch: Keep the boat outechopress2023-10-06US

214 215 216 50 of [217 - pages.]