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
3476Canada-U.S. study: Grass carp invade three of the Great Lakesdigitaljournal2017-01-28CA
3477Watch this invisible robot grab a fish out of the bluetheverge2017-02-01US
3478The Mystery of the 19th-Century Maine Marine Monsterhakaimagazine2017-02-06US
3479High levels of element found in coal ash detected in N.C. fish, researchers saywbtv2017-02-07US
3480Tasmanian salmon farms ‘relocated’ 700 fish-crazy sealstheaustralian2017-02-15AU
3481Mysterious oarfish sightings stoke earthquake fears in the PhilippinesRT2017-02-19PH
3482Не только стерлядь, но и щуку дети увидят только в сказкеaif2021-08-25RU
3483Giant sea bass are thriving in Mexican waters – scientific research that found them to be critically endangeredtheconversation2021-08-04US
3484What would you need to give up to save salmon in WA?crosscut2021-08-05US
3485Wicked Tuna! Massachusetts teens catch 455 pounder: ‘My first time going out there’mercury news2021-08-06US
3486River monsters: NC fishermen catch giant catfishes to break state recordswfmynews22021-08-06US
3487Fish rapidly adapt to pollution thousands of times lethal levelsnewscientist2016-12-08US
3488Southaven man gets award for world-record fishwreg2017-01-23US
3489Scientists can't decide if fish feel painbusinessinsider2017-01-18US
3490Photo of frozen fish in S.D. goes viralkotatv2017-01-16CA
3491Japan fish exorcists’ bizarre ritual hit by animal abuse claimsmalaymail2017-01-13JP
3492US salmon may carry Japanese tapewormCNNwire2017-01-14US
3493Sewage plant upgrade reverses 'feminized' male fishCBC News2017-01-13CA
3494Why the U.S. Government Treats Catfish Unlike Any Other Fishatlasobscura2017-01-13US
3495Not so cold-bloodedspectator2017-01-07JP
3496Banff lake may be drained to stop spread of deadly whirling disease in fishCBC News2016-11-08CA
3497Why conservationists are using facial recognition on fishitnews2016-11-17CA
3498Aklavik man 'jiggles' a whopping 1-metre-long loche fishCBC News2016-11-20CA
3499Allowing bottom trawlers to fish in protected areas like 'bulldozing through a nature reserveitv2021-07-22UK
3500Необычный моряк из МурманскаVK2021-08-21RU

215 216 217 139 of [218 - pages.]