Troubled Waters 
By Michael Carlowicz US Source: earthobservatory 9/25/2021
Michael Carlowicz
It was once a source of great abundance—particularly fossil fuels and fish—for the people of Venezuela. Now Lake Maracaibo is mostly abundant with pollution from leaking oil and excess nutrients.

Spanning 13,000 square kilometers (5,000 square miles) in northwestern Venezuela, Lake Maracaibo is one of South America’s largest lakes and one of the oldest in the world. Though it was filled with freshwater thousands of year ago, Maracaibo is now an estuarine lake connected to the Gulf of Venezuela and the Caribbean Sea by a narrow strait. That strait was significantly expanded in the 1930–50s by dredging for ship traffic. Now the north end of the lake is brackish, while the south end is mostly fresh due to abundant flows from nearby rivers.
 

In satellite images acquired in September 2021, Lake Maracaibo was swirling with shades of green, tan, and gray that traced the flow of currents and eddies. The sources of those colors were algae, river sediment outflows, and crude oil leaks. The image at the top of this page was acquired by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite on September 25. The Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 observed the scene below on September 10.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4726Climate Change has Surprising Effect on Endangered Naked Carp; 'Metabolic Holiday'Underwatertimes2006-12-19US
4727Snakeheads Appear at Home in the Potomacwashington post2006-10-02US
4728Farming endangered blue-fin tuna bbc news2006-12-27JP
4729World First as Endangered Fish Population Recovers; Shortnose Sturgeon Numbers Up 400%Underwatertimes2007-02-06US
4730Chips plan to keep an eye on fishbbc news2006-10-16CA
4731Scientists: First Documented Spawning of White Fish in the Detroit River Since 1900sunderwatertimes2006-10-17US
4732Study: Critical Nutrients in Ecosystems Change when Fish Become Extinctunderwatertimes2007-03-27CA
4733'No debate' that fish farms kill wild salmon, says B.C. scientistCBC News2006-10-20CA
4734A Swarm of Biologically-inspired Little Underwater Explorersharvard2021-01-15US
4735Scientists discover electric eels hunting in a groupSmithsonian2021-01-14BZ
4736Robot fish equipped with tiny cameras could change ocean rescuesctvnews2021-01-13CA
4737The B.C. fish you've likely never heard of that's confounding trawlers and officialsCBC News 2021-01-03US
4738Thai Fishermen Break Ranks, Vow to Resume Hunt of Endangered Mekong Catfish; 'We Need to Make A Living'underwatertimes2006-03-04TH
4739Despite rescue effort, Maine salmon may be facing extinctionunderwatertimes2006-01-31CA
4740One fish, two fish: New sensor improves fish countsunderwatertimes2006-02-02US
4741Scientists: Evolutionary Origin of Fins, Limbs Discovered; 'This Confirms a Lovely Idea'underwatertimes2006-07-26US
4742Study: Great Lakes' Salmon Failing To Thrive Because of 'Junk Food' DietUnderwatertimes2006-05-21US
4743Warming Swiss rivers threaten fish stocksswissinfo2020-12-31CH
4744European chub named Fish of the Yearswissinfo2021-01-02CH
4745First as Brit Pair's Carp Conquers Japanese Koi Show; 'Our Fish is Superb'Underwatertimes2006-02-04UK
4746Researcher: 'Two-Mouthed' Trout Caused by Injury, Not Geneticsunderwatertimes2006-02-08US
4747Biologists dispute fish farm study that says farmed salmon can coexist with real salmonalaskareport2006-08-03CA
4748Study: Protein Myglobin Key to Common Carp's Ability to Survive with Little OxygenUnderwatertimes2006-06-01UK
4749Skipper nets 'miracle' swordfishbbc2006-08-08UK
4750Consumer Reports: Pregnant Women Should Not Eat Canned Tuna; 'It's Prudent'Underwatertimes2006-06-05US

214 215 216 189 of [217 - pages.]