Study: Without crowds, bigger fish back at Molokini 
US Source: The Maui News 6/29/2020
Study: Without crowds, bigger fish back at Molokini
More fish and larger predators, such as ulua, omilu and reef sharks, have returned to the waters off Molokini in the few months that commercial boat traffic has been halted due to COVID-19 emergency orders, said a researcher who was part of a survey team of the preserve.

“While these increases are likely temporary and will probably disappear once visitors return to Molokini, our surveys show just how quickly our marine systems can rebound if given a chance,” said Alan Friedlander, a chief scientist with National Geographic and head of the University of Hawaii Fisheries Ecology Research Laboratory, in a news release Tuesday.
 

The recent data of Molokini provided further evidence of findings in a study published in October, which found that many marine management areas in Hawaii are too small and allow some form of human use. This can limit their ability to restore depleted fisheries.

Friedlander was lead author of the study titled “Characteristics of effective marine protected areas in Hawai’i,” published in Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems.

The average marine management area size in Hawaii is almost a half square mile, “minuscule compared with the geographic extent of the species they are designed to protect,” the news release about the study said. Marine management areas comprise 5 percent of state waters, which extend out to 3 nautical miles from shore. Of that percentage, only 1.4 percent of nearshore areas are fully and highly protected waters — and most of that area is the Kaho’olawe Island Reserve.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4151New species of fish discovered in ocean trench near NZnzherald2013-02-04NZ
4152Salmon virus poses no risk to U.S. exports: CFIACBC News2013-02-01CA
4153Astonishing pictures of the bizarre creatures that lurk deep beneath the ocean wavesdailymail2013-01-30UK
4154Historic cod fishing cuts threaten centuries-old industry in New EnglandCNN2013-02-04CA
4155Are You Eating What You Think You’re Eating?slate2013-01-29US
4156Landslide blocks Beatton Riveralaskahighwaynews2015-10-19CA
4157Shocking developments: Fish and Game plans to electrofish 12,000 rainbow trout from South Forkpostregister2021-04-15US
4158Aboard the Lake Guardian, scientists fish for the story of Lake Ontariowxxinews2021-04-13US
4159Nearly 30 invasive carp pulled from Mississippi River in herding operationStar Tribune2021-04-09US
4160Underwater fish tornadoearthsky2013-01-28US
4161Biologists campaign to save fishTaiwan News2013-01-28TW
4162DNR: Angler Caught Nearly 250 Fish Illegallyminnesota.cbslocal2013-01-24US
4163Teen angler thumbs his nose at critics of his sportportnews2013-01-23US
4164Gilbert spa owner challenges order stopping fish pedicureseastvalleytribune2013-01-14US
4165Anglers finally off the hook as scientists settle age-old debate over whether fish feel paindailymail2013-01-12UK
4166Colombo's fishy beauty in danger of extinctionemirates2472013-01-13LK
4167Salmon Runs Boom, Go Bust Over Centuries; No 'Signal Of Commercial Fishing' In TrendsUnderwatertimes2013-01-14US
4168Search continues for person seen floating in Coquihalla River in Hopealdergrovestar2020-07-02CA
4169Coquihalla Calling: Dynamite to the rescue for a stranded stock of steelheadgofishbc2017-10-13CA
4170Eat the Fish enters new business waters due to pandemicCBC News2021-03-09CA
4171Lake Of The Woods Walleye Population In Dire Straitsfishncanada2021-04-26CA
4172Thompson steelhead trapped at bottom of Bonaparte River fishwayashcroftcachecreekjournal2019-04-11CA
4173Flood warning issued for Bonaparte River, nearly 200 Cache Creek homes on evacuation alertradionl2020-07-04CA
4174На больших глубинах обнаружено неожиданное разнообразие жизниhabr2021-04-28RU
4175Wildlife managers use underwater noise, herding techniques to trap invasive carpspectrumnews12021-04-12US

219 220 221 166 of [222 - pages.]