logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
              
logo 11/27/2024 9:45:13 AM     
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
3226Wild fish stocks squandered to feed farmed salmon, study findstheguardian2022-03-02UK
3227She went from show diver to aquarium curatorindependenttribune2022-03-08UK
3228Platteville fish dealer convicted in state’s first invasive carp casenbc152022-03-10US
3229How do blind cavefish survive their low-oxygen environment?University of Cincinnati2022-03-13US
3230One fish, two fish: New goby species described from the Philippinesmongabay2022-02-21PH
3231Would you eat fish or prawns caught in the Brisbane River? For some anglers it's back on the menuABC Radio Brisbane2022-02-23AU
3232Huge haul: NH tuna captain reels in 800 pound fishwhdh2022-02-23US
3233China puts total fishing ban on ailing Yellow River’s upper reachesscmp2022-02-26CN
3234Huge Great White Snatches 100lb Tuna From Fisherman, Leaving His Hand 'All Cut Up'MSN2022-03-06US
323512+ Pound Burbot Breaks New Hampshire State Recordfishncanada2022-01-13CA
3236Snapper, tarakihi and ... koi carp? Pest fish for sale alongside NZ favouritesstuff2022-02-21NZ
3237A new discovery could help save this 10-foot-long 'living fossil' fishnationalgeographic2022-02-17UK
3238Koi hobbyists in tears: Expensive fish lost during power outagetrinidadexpress2022-02-18US
323910 killed, 11 missing after Spanish fishing boat sinks off Newfoundland coastcbc2022-02-15SP
3240Iowa Man Catches Huge Flathead Catfish While Ice Fishingkhak2022-02-27US
3241Spain mourns worst fishing tragedy in 38 years after sinking of Villa de Pitanxotheguardian2022-02-16SP
3242Neolithic fisherman who died 5,000 years ago, and was found in a mass grave in Northern Chiledailymail2022-02-16UK
3243It may be the little things that determine whether whales and salmon surviveThe Olympian2022-02-13US
3244North Carolina Angler Breaks 61-Year-Old Fishing Record Using A Rod He Built Himselfbrobible2022-02-14US
3245Mayor Who Said Ice Fishing Leads to Prostitution Resignsvice2022-02-14US
3246Fish Biologist Proves That Disney Lied to Children With ‘Finding Nemo’insidethemagic2022-02-15US
3247More fish than previously thought can shoot down prey by spitting water at themnews9live2022-02-16CA
3248Death and decimation: Whitby devastated by declining marine lifetheguardian2022-02-10UK
3249Fishing image wins marine conservation photography prizecnn2022-02-11VE
3250Annual quest for ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ fish lasts 35 minutesthealpenanews2022-02-07US

134 135 136 129 of [137 - pages.]