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
5476Swing-jig walleyeoodmag2019-03-14CA
5477National Lifejacket Day – Is It Time for Change?Fish'n Canada2019-05-16CA
54787 Reasons Why Size Matters for Halibutnoaa2019-03-14CA
5479Ancient fish ponds in the Bolivian savanna supported human settlementPLOS2019-05-15BR
5480Walleye, sauger in danger of disappearing from Lake Winnipeg, says Manitoba Wildlife Federationglobalnews2018-10-29CA
5481Fishing changes coming to Lake Winnipeg to help restore fish populationglobalnews2019-05-07CA
5482The mysterious case of the Kamloops Lake monsterCBC News2019-05-13CA
5483'Like a bad dream': Parks Canada fights back against invasive species in KejiCBC News 2019-05-13CA
5484Paddlefish Snagging Harvest Season to Close May 11outdoornewsdaily2019-05-09US
5485Kenora based angler Jeff Gustafson joins BassmasterCBC News2019-02-02US
5486Ontario Extending its Partnership with Nipissing First Nation to Support Walleye RecoveryOntario's official news source2019-03-12CA
5487Redfish rebound in Gulf of St. Lawrence show no signs of slowdownCBC News2019-05-12CA
5488Lunar Activity Increases Fish CaughtCanadian Angling.com 2019-05-10CA
5489Slab crappie could be a new state recordoutdoornews2019-05-09US
5490Fishing husband, wife cited for being over the limit – to the tune of 250-plus crappiesoutdoornews2018-08-01US
5491Smallmouth bass sets new state recordoutdoornews2019-05-09US
5492Three locked-up bucks found dead in Ohiooutdoornews2010-12-14US
5493New 5-Year Report Shows 101.6 Million Americans Participated in Hunting, Fishing & Wildlife ActivitiesInterior_Press2019-05-09US
5494U.S. angler pays Ontario $400 fine for keeping 52lb lake troutCBC News2019-04-02CA
5495Sweeping reforms to West Coast fisheries recommendedvancouver news2019-05-09CA
5496Huge ‘Prehistoric’ Alligator Gar Caught in Oklahoma’s Lake TexomaNewsWeek2019-04-23US
5497Pimp my shack: Luxury ice fishing a growing trend in AlbertaCBC News2019-02-16CA
5498Alberta Cree man successfully challenges illegal fishing ticketCBC News2018-10-03CA
5499Fish fall from sky with rain in northern MexicoAssociated Press2019-05-06MX
5500B.C. salmon fishing guides fear for livelihoods amid fishery closurevancouver sun2019-05-04CA

218 219 220 219 of [221 - pages.]