FGCU researchers say dead fish from red tide can be turned into natural fertilizer 
By McKenna King US Source: abcaction news 11/5/2021

Red tide has had damaging impacts on our marine life and economy over the last several years, but researchers at Florida Gulf Coast University and Mote Marine Aquarium are working to turn the bad into something positive for the future by turning dead fish into eco-friendly fertilizer.

The project is part of the Florida Red Tide Mitigation & Technology Development Initiative, led by Mote Marine Laboratory in collaboration with FWC.
 

The first thing they looked at was whether or not removing the fish kills early on prevented the algal blooms from getting any worse.

“Red tide can kill the fish, as the fish decay they release the nutrients back in the water that can feed back into red tide,” said Dr. Mike Parsons, Professor of Marine Science at Florida Gulf Coast University.

What they found was that removing dead fish did ensure they weren’t just adding fuel to the fire.

“What we found was that fish are in fact releasing a lot of nutrients," said Parsons.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4576USGS, ERDC Scientists installing experimental underwater acoustic deterrent system to stop spread of invasive Asian carpwqad2021-02-04US
4577The 495 species that got away for Sussex anglertheargus2009-05-11UK
4578Brisbane Scientist Discovers New Species Of Fish; 'A Most Exciting Discovery'Underwatertimes2009-04-29AU
4579CIBA achieves breakthrough in captive breeding of grey mullet fishthe hindu2021-01-29IN
4580Call to modernise, not expand, Scottish fishing fleetbbc2021-01-29UK
4581Metre-long sturgeon discovered in Brierfield garden centre spring clean 2009-04-16UK
4582The bizarre South American armoured fish found in a Leicestershire canalDaily Mail2009-03-29US
4583Pharmaceuticals Discovered In Fish In Five Major US Cities; 'Highest Concentrations In Fish Livers'Underwatertimes2009-03-25US
4584Blind Fish's Sensors May Spur Development Of New Generation Of Active SonarUnderwatertimes2009-03-24US
4585Snakehead fish now in Alabama? Sounds like it's a possibilityAL2009-03-23US
4586Rare 'funny-looking' lumpsucker fish found in CornwallCornwall News2021-02-05UK
4587A Single Altered Gene Can Make Fish Fins More Like Limbssmithsonianmag2021-02-04US
4588Human-generated Sounds May Kill FishUnderwatertimes2009-03-12US
4589Vampire fish found in stream in northern BurmaMirror.co.uk2009-03-11UK
4590Invasive species are greatest threat to Northwest salmon, report saysThe Oregonian2009-03-05US
4591Lake Michigan Fish Populations Threatened By Thriving Junk Food Mussel, Decline Of Nutritious Tiny ShrimpUnderwatertimes2009-02-19US
4592Two-headed fish probe finds no pesticide in waterabc2009-02-18US
4593Historical Photographs Expose Decline In Florida's 'Trophy' Fish; 'Large Fish More Abundant In The Past'Underwatertimes2009-02-17US
4594Anglers keen to catch 'Phar Lap'dailyexaminer2009-02-18AU
4595Couple shaken after snowmobile crashes into fish house on Lake Minnetonkafox news2021-02-01US
4596Fast-growing fish farming can help the environment, researcher saysCBC News2009-01-02US
4597Zoo 'first' to breed dragon fishbbc2009-01-14UK
4598To Work With Six Identified Nations To Address Illegal, Unreported, And Unregulated FishingUnderwatertimes2009-01-13US
4599Fish Poop Helps Balance Ocean's Acid Levels; 'A Long-standing Puzzle Facing Marine Chemists'Underwatertimes2009-01-15UK
46002 Billion Tons: Researcher Gives First-ever Estimate Of Worldwide Fish Biomass And Impact On Climate ChangeUnderwatertimes2009-01-15CA

215 216 217 183 of [218 - pages.]