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
1526Уловистая и хитрая жерлица-рогулькаohotniki2023-07-04RU
1527Pro golfer catches 50-inch Northern Pike on 12th hole of U.S. Senior OpenCBS Minnesota2023-06-30US
1528Venezuelan women are increasingly taking up the grueling work of fishingwlrn2023-06-30VE
1529More women are casting their net into the salmon fishing industryCrosscut.com2023-06-30US
1530Watch as a Massive Tuna Fish Attack a Bull Sharkanimals2023-07-02US
1531Charges dropped in NSW Indigenous cultural fishingABC South East NSW2023-06-28AU
1532Anglers asked to kill invasive fish than can live outside the watermsn2023-06-20US
1533Captain of fishing boat disqualified for ‘mutilated’ marlincnn2023-06-20US
1534Historic boom in Lake Superior's herring population could be best in 40 yearsStar Tribune2023-06-22US
1535New aquatic store helps design underwater worldsNashville Tennessean2023-06-23US
1536Akvafuture hopes to bring closed barrier tech to Canadian salmon industrythefishsite2023-07-07CA
1537Семга более чем на 20 килограмм поймана в реке Восточная Лицаohotniki2023-06-30RU
1538Retired tuna boat skipper Terry Aldenhoven reflects on six decades of fishingABC Eyre Peninsula2023-06-23AU
1539The world's fish are shrinking as the climate warms.abc2023-06-19AU
1540The importance of small-scale freshwater fish farmsthefishsite2023-07-05JP
1541Could water fleas remediate aquaculture effluent and provide fish nutrition?thefishsite2023-07-07DK
1542Как меня выводили на чистую водуohotniki2023-06-29RU
1543Unheard of marine heatwave off UK and Irish coasts poses serious threattheguardian2023-06-19UK
1544Fishing tournament defends disqualifying blue marlin worth $3.5 millionCNN Newsource2023-06-21US
1545How to identify, kill and eat Louisiana's newest invadernola2023-06-12US
1546Crews clear tens of thousands of fish on beach in Brazoria Coclick2houston2023-06-14BZ
1547Fisherman in Georgia reels in 27-pound longnose garFox News2023-07-05US
1548'Vampire fish' in Great Lakes take bites out of large catchesFox News2023-07-03US
1549Is rapid growth dangerous for juvenile farmed salmon?thefishsite2023-07-04NO
1550Helping Colombia’s tilapia farmers overcome the Streptococcus outbreakthefishsite2023-07-05CO

215 216 217 61 of [218 - pages.]