Loss of Tiny Organisms Hurts Ocean, Fishing, Scientists Say 
US Source: Associated Press 1/19/2023
Loss of Tiny Organisms Hurts Ocean, Fishing, Scientists Say
Credit: AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty
The warming of the waters off the East Coast has come at an invisible, but very steep cost — the loss of microscopic organisms that make up the base of the ocean's food chain.

The growing warmth and saltiness of the Gulf of Maine off New England is causing a dramatic decrease in the production of phytoplankton, according to Maine-based scientists who recently reported results of a yearslong, NASA-funded study. Phytoplankton, sometimes described as an “invisible forest,” are tiny plant-like organisms that serve as food for marine life.
 

The scientists found that phytoplankton are about 65% less productive in the Gulf of Maine, part of the Atlantic Ocean bounded by New England and Canada, than they were two decades ago. The Gulf of Maine has emerged as one of the fastest warming sections of the world's oceans.

Potential loss of phytoplankton has emerged as a serious concern in recent years in other places, such as the Bering Sea off Alaska. The loss of the tiny organisms has the ability to disrupt valuable fishing industries for species such as lobsters and scallops, and it could further jeopardize imperiled animals such as North Atlantic right whales and Atlantic puffins, scientists said.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
2576Angling restrictions could come to parts of Alberta as warm water causes ‘stress in fish’: biologistmsn2022-08-17CA
2577Несколько советов в рыбалке на кукурузуtelegra2022-08-15RU
2578Эффективная летняя насадкаОхотники.ру2022-08-17RU
2579На Дальнем Востоке в 2022 году добыли 2,26 млн тонн рыбыРыболовство2022-08-17RU
2580River Chief Imprisoned for Fishing Fights for Sacred RightsAssociated Press2022-08-16US
2581DNR: Indiana Fish Kill Likely Due to Heat, Natural EventsAssociated Press2022-08-16US
2582Prehistoric Fish May Spawn in Georgia: 1st Time in 50 YearsAssociated Press2022-08-16US
2583Is krill fishing accelerating climate change?thefishsite2022-08-16US
2584Maryland man wins $4.4M for reeling in 77.5-pound white marlinFox News2022-08-16US
2585Meet Aquanaut: A new deep sea diving robot from NASAinteresting engineering2022-08-15US
2586Иван из ЗабурунногоОхотники.ру2022-08-15RU
2587Columbia River's Salmon Are at the Core of Ancient ReligionAssociated Press2022-08-15US
2588Auburn researchers report blue catfish genome breakthroughThe Fish Site2022-08-15US
2589Fishermen catch rare blue lobster off coast of Maine, crustacean will live in family restaurant's tankFox News2022-08-15US
2590Hawaii’s ‘last fishing village’ gets special state designation to protect its watershawaiinews now2022-08-04US
2591More than 600 catfish seized in illegal fishing bust on Mississippi RiverWBRZ2022-08-05US
2592Fishing boat hits Norwegian cruise ship traveling from Boston to BermudaBoston 25 News2022-07-31US
2593Watch electrofishing method used to survey fish populationsboingboing2022-08-01US
2594Venomous fish drawn to Plymouth beaches 'make grown men and women cry'plymouthherald2022-08-01UK
2595This fish evolved to walk on land — then said 'nope' and went back to the waterwgbh2022-07-31US
2596Isisford builds third big yellowbelly statue to reel in touristsABC Western Qld2022-08-01AU
2597Fish farming may threaten rare Gulf whaleyoursun2022-08-02US
2598Scientists record behemoth in waters 2 km deep off Shizuokaasahi2022-07-31JP
259990 percent of fish consumed in Pakistan is contaminated, says WWFgeo2022-08-01US
2600'Saildrones' in Lake Superior will study fish populationsnbc25 news2022-08-02US

215 216 217 103 of [218 - pages.]