The heat is on for the 'living fossil' 
CN Source: China Daily 12/9/2014
The heat is on for the 'living fossil'
The Chinese Sturgeon has been around for 140 million years, but economic development may soon result in China's rarest native species disappearing for good.

Having spent more than three decades researching and protecting the wild Chinese sturgeon, Wei Qiwei can't stop worrying that this rare, ancient fish may become extinct in the coming decades.

In the past two years, researchers have discovered no evidence of natural reproductive activity in the Yangtze River for the first time since the species was first recorded in the 1980s, according to Wei, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences.
 

"If the wild fish cannot reproduce naturally, those currently alive will be the last of their kind," he said.

The academy's records show that before 2003, female sturgeons laid their eggs from late October to late November, but between 2003 and 2012, a number of factors resulted in the spawning season being delayed by a month, to later November and early December.

Although the researchers will continue to observe the fish, the chances of detecting sturgeon eggs in the section of the Yangtze River near Yichang, Hubei province - the site of the Three Gorges Dam - are slim.

"It's estimated that there are only about 100 sturgeons in the river now, compared with more than 2,000 in the early 1980s," Wei said.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3926Atlantic Bluefin Tuna quotas see first increase in 24 yearsCBC News2014-11-18CA
3927The sockeye salmon's incredible, vital journeymacleans2014-11-16CA
3928Michigan State scientists: don't forget about freshwater fish!upi2014-11-10US
3929The U.S. Is Spending $4.5-Million To Save The Rarest Fish On Earthgizmodo2014-10-31US
3930Куда "плюнет" Босфорrg2021-06-10RU
3931Company is recycling old Alaska fishing gear into line of rugged clothingadn2021-05-26US
3932Banned pesticide blamed for killing bees may be approved for fish farmstheguardian2021-05-27UK
3933Discarded fish scales and frog skin used to make bone repair materialnewatlas2021-05-28SG
3934State's largest pike poisoning project underway in Soldotnaalaska journal2014-10-22US
3935Fishing or Fish Farming: Which Is More Responsible?treehugger2017-06-05NL
3936You might think you know your pet goldfish, but its origins and biology are stranger than you ever guessedbbc2014-10-21CN
3937Photos capture the quadrennial phenomenon as millions of salmon jam B.C.'s Adams riverthe globe and mail2014-10-20CA
3938Whole Foods Pushes Consumption, Conservation Of Paichesanfrancisco2014-10-16US
3939No new fisheries in the Arctic following federal banCTV News2014-10-17CA
3940Angler baked, ate record-breaking fishdelaware online2014-10-09US
3941Fish Colon Offers Insight Into Evolutionuniversity herald2014-10-08US
3942Pacific Island nations secure $90m tuna deal with United Statesabc2014-10-08US
3943Did Three Anglers Release the Largest Tarpon Ever Caught on Rod-and-Reel?sportfishingmag2014-10-06NI
3944Texas man sets world record after catching rare hybrid fishFox News2021-05-25US
3945Where did all the salmon go? An old orca has seen a lot of changes in more than 90 yearsseattletimes2021-05-30US
3946Non-kosher fish eaten in Jerusalem during early days of Judaismnewscientist2014-09-25IL
3947Can Electric Fish Talk Like Obama?theatlantic2021-05-26US
3948How a Frenzy for Echinoderms Exposed and Entrenched Inequities in a Fishing Communityhakaimagazine2021-05-27PW
394912-year-old fisherman wins $15K for catching 26-pound fish in New Yorkfoxnews2021-05-18US
3950Blind cavefish ditches circadian rhythm to save energyABC2014-09-25NZ

220 221 222 157 of [223 - pages.]