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
5326Fewer fish or fishy science? Industry, biologists differ over Lake Winnipeg walleyeCBC News2019-07-08CA
5327How $2M may help save endangered and threatened fish on Peche IslandCBC News2019-07-08CA
5328The bacterium that's battling Streptococcus in tilapiaThe Fish Site 2019-07-04US
5329Fish From Infamous Cuyahoga River Are Now Safe to Eatusnews.com2019-03-19US
5330Migrating salmon blocked by Fraser River landslide could be trucked out: DFOCBC News2019-07-04CA
5331Major rock slide in Fraser River sparks fears of blocking migrating salmonGlobal News2019-07-02CA
5332Aliens of the deep: Russian fisherman shows off collection of weird fishDaily Mail2019-06-27RU
5333Study reveals why some largemouth bass are harder to catchPittsburgh Post-Gazette2019-06-13US
5334Alberta motocross club hit with $70K in fines for event that saw bikes ride through threatened-species habitatCBC2019-06-27CA
5335St. John River angler blames mercury poisoning on fish caught in headpondCBC News2019-06-27CA
5336Robotic Fish Is Now Powered by 'Robot-Blood' for Greater Autonomyinteresting engineering2019-06-20CA
5337Canada to ban importing, exporting shark fins as Fisheries Act overhaul to become lawipolitics2019-06-19CA
5338Recreational chinook salmon fishing restricted on most Yukon riversCBC2018-07-26CA
5339Pub ban lifted on year-long sting that busted Sask. Indigenous man for selling $90 of fishCBC News2019-06-18CA
5340A Former Monsanto Executive Could Be the Next U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Directorpsmag2018-10-23US
5341Dozens of dead fish found around Moncton's Jones Lake, prompts investigationCBC News2019-06-17CA
5342The Beyond Meat of fish is comingWashington Post2019-06-17CA
5343Fish in Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama on ‘threatened’ listAP2019-01-30US
5344Ambitious new plan to save Atlantic salmon has big price tagAPN2019-02-14US
5345‘The ride of a lifetime’: Calgary fishermen catch massive 11-foot sturgeon in B.C. riverGlobal News2019-06-13CA
5346Conservationists raise alarm over wild fish found on B.C. salmon farmsquesnelobserver2019-06-11CA
5347Secretary Bernhardt Proposes Increasing Public Access to Hunting and Fishing on 1.4 Million Acres Nationwidefws2019-06-05US
5348Asian carp DNA found in Chicago area near Lake MichiganAP2019-03-20CA
5349Expert determines man's giant catch to be rare, old fish: 'I had never seen something like that'Fox News2019-06-10US
5350New regulation for Maine fishermen might ease tension in 'grey zone'CBC News2019-06-07CA

214 215 216 213 of [217 - pages.]