Fish fertilize corals and seagrasses but not the way you think 
By Angela Nicoletti PA Source: flu 9/28/2021
Angela Nicoletti
Fish are like underwater gardeners, fertilizing the coral reefs, kelp forests and seagrasses where they reside. Their fertilizer of choice — their own pee.

But, fish communities are facing many changes. Warming oceans mean tropical fish can venture into areas they couldn’t before when the waters were cooler. And then there are the human impacts, including fishing and habitat destruction.

Will Wied, a Ph.D. student in Justin Campbell’s lab in the FIU Institute of Environment, wants to get to the bottom of how these different factors are altering the all-important nutrient balance. And he’s going straight to the No. 1 source of these nutrients — fish waste.
 

“I’m not just looking at how the fish may be eating a lot more, but also how their excretion is then recycled. Are they no longer hanging out in the seagrass beds, so now the seagrasses don’t have a source of nutrients?” Wied said. “It’s about picking at different pieces of that overall question of how community structure dictates the quality and quantity of nutrients.”

Fish waste — excreted through the gills, in addition to the most obvious source — has a lot of beneficial and life-sustaining nutrients, including nitrogen and phosphorous. If fish numbers dwindle and the steady supply of urine slows, these ecosystems suffer.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4626NOAA: $100 Million Of Disaster-relief Aid Available To U.S. West Coast Salmon FishermenUnderwatertimes2008-09-18US
4627Silent Streams? Nearly 40 Percent Of North American Freshwater Fish Now At-RiskUnderwatertimes2008-09-10US
4628Snapping Salmon: A Biologist's Underwater Passion Morning Edition2008-08-02US
4629Discovery of sea trout in Seine shows success of river clean-uptheguardian2008-08-02UK
4630Fishing in Peru? Take a long line, but no dynamiteReuters Life2008-08-05PE
4631Deadliest catch: Thailand's 'ghost' fishing nets help COVID fightmanilastandard2021-01-24TH
4632Scientists Receive Signals From The Atlantic Salmon Highway; 'Helps Us Fill In A Big Gap'Underwatertimes2008-08-19US
4633О Байкале и не только в назидание потомкамrg2021-02-05RU
4634Dredging of Mindemoya River important to salmon populationManitoulin Expositor2018-09-21CA
4635Mindemoya River mouth dredged to accomodate spawning salmonManitoulin Expositor2011-10-05CA
4636История ГМО лосося, который все же попал на рынокHABR2021-02-05RU
4637Omega-6 Rich Tilapia Healthy; Replacing With Bacon, Hamburgers Or Doughnuts 'Not Recommended'Underwatertimes2008-07-17US
4638Beijing to give five more sturgeons to Hong Kongchina.org2008-07-15CN
4639Microchips to Stop Illegal Sturgeon HuntScience News2008-07-18RU
4640New Catfish Species Named For Museum Mail Supervisor; 'I Was Impressed By Frank's Dedication'Underwatertimes2008-06-09US
4641No furry-tail ending to this dragon questsmh2008-05-05AU
4642Commercial Ban As 'Fish Failure' Declared For U.S. West Coast Salmon Fishery; 'A Tough Decision'Underwatertimes2008-05-02US
4643Fish, yabbies and aquatic life dead after 'toxic' herbicide treatment in irrigation channelabc2021-01-22AU
4644В Приморье заложили краболов и сдали рыбодобывающий заводrg2019-11-28RU
4645Рыбакам разрешат потрошить улов на бортуrg2021-02-04RU
4646Fossil fills out water-land leapbbc2008-06-25UK
4647Rare fish 'back from the brink'bbc2008-07-07UK
4648Tilapia Contains Potentially Dangerous Fatty Acid Combination; 'Exaggerated Inflammatory Response'Underwatertimes2008-07-10US
4649Tennessee man reels in monster catchWZTV 2021-01-25US
4650Caring grandmother finds a giant fish in the road and stops at nothing to save itTrainee Reporter2021-01-22UK

215 216 217 185 of [218 - pages.]