logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Skip Navigation Links
logo 9/23/2024 10:22:45 AM     
Antarctic fish study may aid cardiac research 
By Linda Capper CA Source: eurekalert 3/30/2004

A species of fish that lives in Antarctic waters may hold clues to climate change and lead to advances in heart medicine. Researchers from the University of Birmingham and the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) are investigating the behaviour and physiology of the 'Antarctic Cod' (Notothenia coriiceps) which became isolated from its warmer water cousins around 30 million years ago when the Antarctic circumpolar current was formed.
 

The olive-coloured fish has broad head and a narrow body. Whilst scientists know that it has 'antifreeze' in its blood and maintains a very low heart rate of less than 10 beats per minute, almost nothing is known about its behaviour or how it evolved to live in Antarctica's extreme environment.

Discovering how the species may cope with predicted environmental change could help stock management or conservation of biodiversity within the Southern Ocean. In addition, it is possible that this research could lead to advances in medicine, especially relating to the problems experienced by human hearts when made to beat slowly (e.g. during surgery involving heart-lung bypass) or fail to beat fast enough (e.g. as a result of hypothermia in water or exposure on a mountain).

 
Atlantic cod Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
801Be a better anglerechopress2024-02-09US
802Fog and fishing flurries highlight day enjoying Lake Winnipegs winter walleye paradiseechopress2024-02-10CA
803Angler feels thump — then reels in fish hes never seen beforeMiami Herald2024-01-16US
804Tokyo couple arrested over unpermitted cultivation of glowing fishKYODO NEWS2024-01-17JP
805Fire-eyed river creature — with odd way of protecting its eggs — is a new speciesmiamiherald2024-01-17BU
806Was the Massachusetts record for largest fish caught broken in 2023?wwlp2024-01-18US
807Mysterious bass sound in South Tampa resurfacesfox13news2024-01-17US
808Indigenous effort in Bangladesh helps reverse endangered fishs slide to extinctionmongabay2024-01-19BD
809Безмотылки открывают сезонohotniki2024-02-02RU
810Recent steps towards closing the life cycle of European eelthefishsite2024-02-05UK
811Farmers pledge more funding to help save Scotlands wild salmonthefishsite2024-02-03UK
812Florida high schooler reels in 250-pound goliath grouper from beachFox News2024-02-05US
813Nova Scotian investigations lead to CAD 260,000 in fines over halibut fishery violationsseafoodsource2024-02-08CA
814Virtual fishing tournament reels in walleyemississippivalleypublishing2024-02-06US
815Massive sea creature with over 3,000 teeth seen in rare Australia visitmiamiherald2024-02-08AU
816Sonar plus jigging spoon equals fishechopress2024-02-02US
817Minnesota DNR reworks management plans for over 100 lakesechopress2024-02-07US
818A new stem-tetrapod fish from the Middle–Late Devonian of central Australiatandfonline2024-01-13AU
819Whirling disease confirmed in B.C. for 1st time, sparking fears for fish populationsCBC News2024-01-19US
820Fish bombing: 2 foreigners nabbed near Pulau Tigadailyexpress2024-01-20MY
821Montanans fish for answers to mysterious decline in trout populationpbs2024-01-20US
822Ловля судака на флейтуohotniki2024-01-23RU
823A new study finds a critical vitamin for salmon in riversopb2024-01-21US
824Popular social media creator catches his first tarpon in Floridabradenton2024-01-16UK
825North Atlantic Fish Stocks Could Halve Due to Hidden Vulnerabilitynewsweek2024-01-17UK

214 215 216 32 of [217 - pages.]