logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Skip Navigation Links
logo 9/22/2024 6:34:47 AM     
Researchers Document Rapid, Dramatic 'Reverse Evolution' In The Threespine Stickleback Fish 
US Source: underwatertimes 5/15/2008

Evolution is supposed to inch forward over eons, but sometimes, at least in the case of a little fish called the threespine stickleback, the process can go in relative warp-speed reverse, according to a study led by researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and published online ahead of print in the May 20 issue of Current Biology (Cell Press).

“There are not many documented examples of reverse evolution in nature,” said senior author Catherine “Katie” Peichel, Ph.D., “but perhaps that’s just because people haven’t really looked.”
 

Peichel and colleagues turned their gaze to the sticklebacks that live in Lake Washington, the largest of three major lakes in the Seattle area. Five decades ago, the lake was, quite literally, a cesspool, murky with an overgrowth of blue-green algae that thrived on the 20 million gallons of phosphorus-rich sewage pumped into its waters each day. Thanks to a $140 million cleanup effort in the mid-‘60s – at the time considered the most costly pollution-control effort in the nation – today the lake and its waterfront are a pristine playground for boaters and billionaires.

It’s precisely that cleanup effort that sparked the reverse evolution, Peichel and colleagues surmise. Back when the lake was polluted, the transparency of its water was low, affording a range of vision only about 30 inches deep. The tainted, mucky water provided the sticklebacks with an opaque blanket of security against predators such as cutthroat trout, and so the fish needed little bony armor to keep them from being eaten by the trout.

 
Lake WASHINGTON Stickleback, Threespine Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4801Escaped farmed salmon find home in Alaskasitnews2004-08-26US
4802Minnesota Couple Wins New Bass Cat In B.A.S.S. Sweepstakesfishingworld2020-12-08US
4803Finding Nemo …How do fish find and recognise ’friends’?innovations-report2004-01-12UK
4804Fisherman lands £8,000 catchbbc news2004-06-02UK
4805Rivers protected to save salmonbbc news2004-06-02UK
4806Sturgeon heads for new homebbc news2004-06-08UK
4807Wild salmon still 'in jeopardy'bbc news2004-07-03UK
4808Israeli company develops environmentally friendly fish cage systemglobes2004-06-01IL
48093 fishermen survive 5 days lost at sea on raw fish, rainwaternewsday2020-12-15TT
4810Ontario Fishing Regulation Changes for 2021Fish'n Canada2020-12-17CA
4811Fish farms on key B.C. salmon migration route to be phased out by 2022The Canadian Press 2020-12-18CA
4812Saguenay Fjord winter recreational groundfish fisherycanada.ca2020-12-22CA
4813Scientists support endangered sturgeonusatoday302004-12-18CA
4814Aquatic scientists divided on role of sea lice from salmon farms in decline of native salmon in B.C.EUREKA2004-03-03CA
4815Scare over farmed salmon safetybbc news2004-01-08US
4816Tracking fish by sonar to prevent over-fishingEUREKA2003-10-14CA
4817Antarctic fish study may aid cardiac researcheurekalert2004-03-30CA
4818Farmed sturgeon 'only hope for caviar'bbc news2002-12-02KZ
4819Snakeheads, other invaders cost billionscnn2002-09-24CA
4820DDT found in trout from Lake ChelanROBERT MCCLURE AND LISA STIFFLER2003-10-18US
4821Americans and Vietnamese Fighting Over Catfishnytimes2003-11-05US
4822Tiny salmon trapped as dam operators cut flows downriverseattle pi2003-03-13CA
4823North Sea cod 'face commercial end'bbc news2002-12-16CA
4824State's ban on gene-altered fish a firstseattle pi2002-12-22US
4825Maryland state officials start poisoning alien snakehead fishusa today2002-08-18SG

214 215 216 192 of [217 - pages.]