Warmer, oxygen-poor waters threaten world’s ‘most heavily exploited’ fish 
By Elizabeth Claire Alberts PE Source: mongabay 1/6/2022
Elizabeth Claire Alberts
A new report using core samples taken from the seabed has determined that the Humboldt Current system off the coast of Peru was home to smaller fish during the last interglacial period, 130,000 years ago.
The conditions back then — with little oxygen content in the ocean and temperatures about 2°C (3.6°F) warmer than the average temperature in the current Holocene epoch — mirror those that scientists have predicted for 2100.
While many studies have argued that warmer water and lower oxygen lead to smaller fish, the added pressure of industrial fishing has made it difficult to determine the threat that climate change will pose on fisheries.
The Humboldt Current system is one of the most productive fisheries in the world, contributing to more than 15% of the global annual fish catch, so significant changes to this system will threaten food security.
 

In 2008, a team of researchers boarded an expedition vessel and set sail for the anchovy-rich waters off the coast of Peru. They were searching for a place to extract a sediment sample that would unearth secrets about the ocean from 130,000 years ago, a time when the planet was experiencing its last interglacial period. About 130 kilometers (80 miles) north of Lima, the researchers found an ideal spot; they bore into the seabed and drew out a 20-meter (66-foot) core sample.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3126Cutting the food chain? The controversial plan to turn zooplankton into fish oiltheguardian2022-01-19UK
3127The smell of money: why locals think Peru’s billion-dollar fishmeal sector stinksthedailybeast2022-01-21US
3128$70K Available in Grants to Protect, Restore WaterwaysAssociated Press2022-01-30US
3129Developer of $400M Salmon Farm Sued by a Former EmployeeAssociated Press2022-01-31US
31303 fishermen rescued off the coast of Massachusetts thanks to woman on shore who called 911Fox News2022-02-03US
3131Magnetic crystals found in the noses of salmon could aid navigationphysicsworld2022-01-31US
3132Conditions After Ida Killed 280M Fish InlandAssociated Press2022-01-27US
3133Meet Methuselah, the Oldest Living Aquarium FishAssociated Press2022-01-26US
3134Ограничения по рыболовству введут на реке Мезень в КомиРыболовство2022-01-28RU
313512-year-old fisher sets two world records after catching a 58-pound fishusatoday2022-01-12US
3136'This helps them forget' | Support group uses fishing to help veterans find peacewcnc2022-01-14US
3137Old man catching ‘fish’ on a building’s roof with a plastic washbasin as pondGlobal Times2022-01-17CN
3138Hundreds of invasive aquarium fish removed from San Marcos Riverksat2022-01-18US
3139We find what looks like an alien species at a fish market so of course we make sashimi out of itsoranews242022-01-20CN
3140Bend fly fisherman catches state, possibly world record mountain whitefish on the DeschutesKTVZ news2022-01-12CA
3141The prince and the mayor and the american fish that invaded japanmediarunsearch2022-01-16JP
3142Israeli startup unveils 3D-printed, plant-based salmon fillettimesofisrael2022-01-17IL
3143Rare fish discovered in Mississippi’s Pearl River, traveled 200 miles and over dam on its journeyMagnolia State Live2022-01-17US
3144Plastic to 'soon outweigh fish' in oceanschinadaily2022-01-19CN
3145Giant Tuna Fetches $155,000 in Tokyo’s Fish Auctionaawsat2022-01-08JP
3146‘Nothing but fish nests’: huge icefish colony found in Antarctic seatheguardian2022-01-13UK
3147Biologists Discovered Two New Species of Goby Fish in the Philippinesnatureworldnews2022-01-15PH
3148Researchers explore ways to make hatchery steelhead more like wild fishthenewsmotion2022-01-18US
3149Holy Mackerel, Where’d You Go?hakaimagazine2022-01-18US
3150A Freezer Full of Eyeballs (and Other Oddities) Animate the Quest to Save California’s Salmonppic2022-01-18US

215 216 217 125 of [218 - pages.]