Supersized Goldfish Could Become Superinvaders 
By Hannah Loss CA Source: scientificamerican 3/23/2022
Hannah Loss
Credit: Christine Boston/Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Just west of Toronto last summer, startled biologists counted more than 20,000 goldfish in a single urban stormwater pond the size of two basketball courts. And the fish, probably descended from dumped pets, were not only thriving numerically—some had grown into three-pound behemoths. Cities around North America have increasingly been building such ponds in the past 40 years to capture rain and runoff, and invasive goldfish are flourishing in thousands of them.
 

Ecologists at the University of Toronto and the Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) are now investigating if and how these ponds’ harsh, polluted environments are selecting for extra-tolerant fish—which might eventually manage to out-compete native species in the nearby Great Lakes. As Nicholas Mandrak, a University of Toronto Scarborough conservation biologist working on the project, puts it: “Are we creating these ‘superinvaders’ that are likely to have incrementally greater impacts in the wild under climate change?”

 
Goldfish Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4801How an Israeli scientist changed the piscine worldclevelandjewishnews2005-12-08IL
4802Meghalaya boy discovers a new species of snakehead fishsentinelassam2021-01-05IN
4803"Tube fishways" could safely lift fish up and over damsnewatlas2020-12-22AU
4804Flying isn't necessary to reach some of Ontario's best fishingBrainerd Dispatch2020-11-21CA
4805Kincardine's new leachate treatment plant up and runningkincardinerecord2017-02-26CA
4806Alberta anglers seek protection for North Raven RiverGlobal News2020-12-07CA
4807DFO has a new plan for northern cod stocks. It doesn't include more fishingCBC News2020-12-31CA
4808Effects of COVID on Angling SurveyFish'n Canada2020-12-24CA
4809The Belgian 'hero' who invaded UK fishing watersbbc news2020-12-21UK
4810Construction begins on world’s first 100,000-tonne intelligent fish farming vessel in QingdaoGlobal Times Published2020-12-20CN
4811Highly contaminated fish in Porcupine Lake, test revealsCBC News2020-10-28CA
4812Ban on fish farms in the Discovery Islands called ‘historic’cheknews2020-12-19CA
4813See the fish that will repopulate Michigan waters with native Arctic graylingmlive2020-12-21US
4814For first time in years, chinook salmon spawn in upper Columbia River system The Associated Press2020-12-18CA
4815Atlantic Salmon Caught Near Ketchikansitnews2004-07-24US
4816Cell swap could help conservationbbc news2004-08-05JP
4817On bass lakes, turning a rite of spring into race for a recordcsmonitor2004-04-20CA
4818Escaped farmed salmon find home in Alaskasitnews2004-08-26US
4819Minnesota Couple Wins New Bass Cat In B.A.S.S. Sweepstakesfishingworld2020-12-08US
4820Finding Nemo …How do fish find and recognise ’friends’?innovations-report2004-01-12UK
4821Fisherman lands £8,000 catchbbc news2004-06-02UK
4822Rivers protected to save salmonbbc news2004-06-02UK
4823Sturgeon heads for new homebbc news2004-06-08UK
4824Wild salmon still 'in jeopardy'bbc news2004-07-03UK
4825Israeli company develops environmentally friendly fish cage systemglobes2004-06-01IL

215 216 217 192 of [218 - pages.]