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
5251Runoff from Dorian may impact fish spawning in N.B. riversGlobal News2019-09-23CA
5252Man catches dinosaur fish in Norway. Viral pic will shock youNew Delhi2019-09-18NO
5253Boat, 26 chinook salmon seized amid allegations of overfishing off B.C. coastGlobal News2019-09-13CA
5254Guelph police chase down 'modern-day Tom Sawyer' who cut class to go fishingCBC News2019-09-19CA
5255Beware of Russian… fish? UK tabloids raise alarm over pink salmon ‘invasion’RT2019-09-06RU
5256Cochrane man takes double gold for fly fishingcochrane times2018-08-30CA
5257Newly discovered eel delivers the strongest electric jolt on recordPlants & Animals2019-09-10BR
52581,000 salmon escaped a farm near the Canada-U.S. borderCTV News2019-09-15CA
5259UK vessels illegally threw away 7,500 tons of cod in North Sea, campaigners sayindependent2019-03-11UK
5260Eight million salmon killed in a week by sudden surge of algae in Norwayindependent2019-05-22NO
5261Chicago water pollution may be keeping invasive silver carp out of Great Lakesscience daily2019-08-09US
5262NOAA Fisheries Declares Unusual Mortality Event Due to Elevated Strandings of Ice Seals in the ArcticNOAA2019-09-12US
5263Hunting And Fishing To Expand On 77 National Wildlife Refuges, Including 10 In The PNWJefferson Public Radio2019-09-11US
5264Whaley Bridge: What happened to Toddbrook Reservoir's fish?BBC News2019-08-11UK
5265Advocates sound alarm on unfolding disaster in B.C. salmon fishing industryThe Canadian Press2019-09-09CA
5266Video: Angler catches monster muskie at Belle River marinaWindsor Star2015-11-15CA
5267‘Unsafe’ levels of antibiotics found in rivers in 72 countriesfrance242019-05-27CA
5268'The fish can't get through': Tsilhqot'in issues salmon closure notice after Big Bar landslideCBC News2019-09-03CA
5269Рыбак в Томской области выловил гигантскую щукуTB-22019-09-03RU
5270Salmon can now be transported around Fraser River landslide by truck, officials sayThe Canadian Press2019-09-03CA
5271Squamish River pink salmon fishery should be closed, say local conservationistsCBC News2019-09-02CA
5272Battling the tench fish invasion: 'Like Game of Thrones under water'montreal gazette2019-08-31CA
5273Ocean Choice International off the hook for illegal fishing chargeCBC News2019-08-29CA
5274Red Deer to remove invasive goldfish infestation from pondCBC News2019-08-29CA
5275Alarm raised after invasive smallmouth bass spotted in MiramichiCBC News2019-08-27CA

214 215 216 210 of [217 - pages.]