The first modern-day marine fish has officially gone extinct. 
By Elizabeth Claire Alberts AU Source: mongabay 6/26/2020
Elizabeth Claire Alberts
The smooth handfish (Sympterichthys unipennis), an unusual species that could “walk” on its pectoral and pelvic fins, is the first marine bony fish to go extinct in modern times, likely due to habitat loss and destructive fishing practices.
There was only ever one specimen of the smooth handfish known to scientists, which became the holotype for the entire species.
The other 13 species of handfish are threatened with extinction due to habitat loss, pollution, destructive fishing practices, and other human-linked causes, and conservationists are stepping up efforts to protect them.
Only four species of handfish have been spotted in the past 20 years, which has raised serious concerns for the future survival of these species.
 

There is only one photo of the smooth handfish: an image of a withered, yellowing specimen with pectoral fins that extend like arms, and a triangular crest attached to the top of its head. Sometime between 1800 and 1804, French zoologist François Péron plucked this fish out of the ocean while voyaging through Australia, presumably in the shallow coastal waters of southeastern Tasmania.

Since then, no other smooth handfish (Sympterichthys unipennis) has ever been spotted, and the fish that Péron collected became the holotype for the entire species. In March 2020, the IUCN officially declared the species to be extinct.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4976Expert: Fish Kill at Indian River Lagoon Was Months in the Makingmynews132020-11-30US
4977Two Kansas rivers may be designated as critical habitat for a tiny fishKSN News2020-12-01US
4978Giant Lake Simcoe burbot could dethrone long-held Ontario record from northCBC News2017-01-26CA
4979Meet the aquaculture industry’s new maintenance botNorwegianscitechnews2020-12-09NO
4980Fishing tournament organizer fined after nearly 200 fish found in dumpsterCBC News2020-12-03CA
4981Fishing gear confirmed as major cause of right whale deathsCBC News2020-11-26CA
4982Fight against fish poachers hampered by lack of resources, says scientistroyalgazette2020-11-25BM
4983Wildlife crimes and human rights abuses plague Taiwanese fishing vessels, crews saynational geographic2020-11-26TW
4984British man 'shocked and appalled' by fly fishing technique in The CrownCBC News2020-11-23CA
4985Australia deploys new underwater technology to fight illegal fishingsea food source2020-11-23AU
4986A proposed fish farm in the Gulf of Mexico is making waveswink news2020-11-23MX
4987Climate Change Is Sending Some Species the Wrong Wayhakai magazine2020-11-23US
4988Fish tales: a pandemic adventure across the US brings two anglers to Iowaweare iowa2020-11-18US
4989Long Island man sues PetSmart after dozens of koi fish diesports grind entertainment2020-11-21US
4990Expedition finds record number of fishes in abyssal deep-seahawaii.edu2020-11-23US
4991Some fish are likely to get caught and recaughtfuturity2020-11-18US
4992Study supports theory that fish fins evolved from gill archesnewatlas2020-11-18US
4993Norwegian report confirms viability of Andfjord’s fish sludge as fertilizer...Undercurrent News2020-11-20NO
4994Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sighttheguardian2020-11-17UK
4995'The Greatest Shoal on Earth': Protecting South Africa's sardine runcnn2020-11-18CA
4996Fears for a million livelihoods in Kenya and Tanzania as Mara River fish die outtheguardian2020-11-10UK
4997'Prevent, discourage, confront': South American states tackle Chinese fishing boatstheguardian2020-11-05UK
4998Going for gold: pet firm reports resurgence in fish-keepingtheguardian2020-11-27UK
4999What do fish eat?yoursun2020-11-25US
5000Over 50,000 salmon escape into wild after fish farm fire in TasmaniaAAP2020-11-23NZ

219 220 221 199 of [222 - pages.]