A Japanese nuclear power plant created a habitat for tropical fish 
By Michael Le Page JP Source: new scientist 5/6/2020
Michael Le Page
Credit: Reiji Masuda/Kyoto University
Tropical fish and other species were able to colonise a small coastal area in the Sea of Japan thanks to discharges from a nearby nuclear power plant. The findings suggest global warming will drastically alter marine ecosystems around the temperate areas of Japan over the next few decades.

Since 2004, Reiji Masuda at Kyoto University and his colleagues have been carrying out underwater surveys every winter at three coastal sites near Kyoto. One of these sites is warmed by the water used to cool the Takahama nuclear power plant, keeping winter water temperatures around 13.6°C.
 

There, the divers saw both more fish overall and a greater diversity of species, including tropical ones such as the blue damselfish (Pomacentrus coelestis) and the cutribbon wrasse (Stethojulis interrupta). Tropical invertebrates included the long-spined sea urchin (a species of Diadema).

“There were so many sea urchins as they did not have predators,” says Masuda.

These tropical species weren’t seen at the other two sites, even though winter temperatures there were only slightly lower, at 12.3°C and 11.7°C.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
551Fewer fish and more rules lead to illegal catches, Italian fishers saymongabay2024-04-26IT
552BC salmon farmer hopes algae can replace wild fish as feed ingredientmycomoxvalleynow2024-04-27CA
553The Moon brings a wild but precarious fish orgy to California's beachesBBC News2024-04-19US
554More California dog owners advised to be aware of salmon poisoning diseasektla2024-04-23US
555Dead Fish Suddenly Found in California Lake Raises Alarmsmsn2024-04-30US
556Angler who posed with giant salmon for proud Facebook picture is netted for illegal fishing and fined nearly £1,000Daily Mail2024-03-16UK
557The patin are gone: the freshwater war against suckermouth catfishfreemalaysiatoday2024-04-13MY
558Nature reserve to be created next to new nuclear plant that will kill tonnes of fish a yeartelegraph2024-04-16UK
559San Antonio angler reels in 30-inch unusual catch in neighborhood pondmysanantonio2024-04-13US
560Girls record catfish sparks controversyusatoday2024-04-18US
561Stolen tropical fish returned to Ottawa Valley restaurantCBC News2024-04-19CA
562Soft sea creature – with red scaleless body — discovered in Japanmiamiherald2024-04-19JP
563This invasive alien fish is threatening the Guadalquivir ecosystemd1softballnews2024-04-14US
564Thai Officials Warn Releasing Fish Into Nature Wont Bring Good Karmayahoo2024-04-15TH
565Truck crash spills live salmon into wrong Oregon riverScientists push new paradigm of animal consciousness, saying even insectsnbcnews2024-04-19US
566Raising fish and a workforce with an economic development grantalleghenyfront2024-04-19US
567Indigenous Marine Scientist Studies Fish Feeding Evolution in Panamasmithsonianmag2024-04-19US
568Boops, hums and farts: The mysterious world of fish communicationBBC News2024-04-19US
569Officials devise unconventional plan to eliminate invasive fish speciesOutdoors2024-04-21US
570Sea-run brook trout in Hudson Bay tributariesfinandfield2017-08-23CA
571Supporting small-scale fisheries in an aquaculture worldthefishsite2024-05-03NO
572Regal Springs pledges to use 100 percent of each tilapia by 2030thefishsite2024-05-03ID
573US Regulators Maintain Fishing Quota for Valuable Baby EelsAssociated Press2024-05-01US
574The Number of Fish on US Overfishing List Reaches an All-Time LowAssociated Press2024-05-06US
575British garbageman reels in record-size fish weighing 64.4kg9news2024-05-01AU

217 218 219 22 of [220 - pages.]