logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Skip Navigation Links
logo 9/21/2024 6:34:15 PM     
Migratory river fish populations plunge 76% in past 50 years 
CA Source: the guardian 7/27/2020

Populations of migratory river fish around the world have plunged by a “catastrophic” 76% since 1970, an analysis has found.

The fall was even greater in Europe at 93%, and for some groups of fish, with sturgeon and eel populations both down by more than 90%.

Species such as salmon, trout and giant catfish are vital not just to the rivers and lakes in which they breed or feed but to entire ecosystems. By swimming upstream, they transport nutrients from the oceans and provide food for many land animals, including bears, wolves and birds of prey.

The migratory fish are also critical for the food security and livelihoods of millions of people around the world, while recreational fishing is worth billions of dollars a year. The causes of the decline are the hundreds of thousands of dams around the world, overfishing, the climate crisis and water pollution.
 

The scientists said the situation may be even bleaker than it seemed, as many declines began before 1970. Populations of sturgeon in the Great Lakes of North America, for example, have dropped by 95% from historic levels. Furthermore, suitable data has not been gathered on species in some of the world’s most biodiverse rivers such as the Mekong, Congo, Amazon and Yangtze, where researchers fear there will be hundreds of fish extinctions in the coming decades.

 
Adams River Salmon, Kokanee Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
651Teen catches aggressive creature in WA pondthenewstribune2024-03-07US
652Young Donegal fisherwoman pleads for future of family businessdonegaldaily2024-03-07IR
653Australias Great Barrier Reef, home to 1,500 species of fish, is dyingIndia Today Environment Desk2024-03-08IN
654Migratory Amazonian catfish placed on the international protection listmongabay2024-03-08US
655Tragic loss for local community as iconic koi fish pond meets mysterious end9now.nine2024-03-09AU
656Scientists use underwater speakers to encourage coral growth on degraded reefshawaiipublicradio2024-03-14US
657Ice fishing comes to a screeching halt in many areasechopress2024-03-16US
65826 people arrested for illegal elver fishing in N.S. this monthctvnews2024-03-18CA
659Alaska’s Yukon River residents say a new pact with Canada leaves them behindnewsfromthestates2024-03-18US
660Parks Canada announces watercraft and angling restrictions for Watertonlethbridgenewsnow2024-03-19CA
661Salmon farms are increasingly being hit by mass die-offsnewscientist2024-03-07NO
662Minnesota lake ice-out starts month earlyechopress2024-03-16US
663Scheme launched to tackle invasive carp populationsthefishsite2024-03-11US
664Future of Maines lucrative baby eel industry to be decided by regulatory boardfoxnews2024-03-14US
665The history of the red tilapiafarmersweekly2014-04-02ZA
666Secrets of the deep – how fish scales could confound counterfeitersnewatlas2024-02-26SG
667One of the worlds smallest transparent fish roars as loud as a gunshotinterestingengineering2024-02-27DE
668Men caught illegally snatching prehistoric creatures from Oregon baythenewstribune2024-02-27US
669Watch fish species chase lasers just like cats1news2024-03-14NZ
670Marine expert defends use of cameras on commercial fishing vessels1news2024-02-28NZ
671Annual Fish Health Report details causes of salmon mortalitythefishsite2024-03-13NO
672Ловля камбалы в Сочиohotniki2024-03-09RU
673Scientists continue to search for what's poisoning Lower Keys fishwlrn2024-03-01US
674Scientists discover new species of fish off Baja California coastFOX 5/KUSI2024-02-28MX
675Should all marine reserves ban fishing? Not necessarily, new study showsmongabay2024-02-29US

214 215 216 26 of [217 - pages.]