Fish eggs can hatch after being eaten and pooped out by ducks 
By Carolyn Wilke CH Source: sciencenews.org 6/29/2020

For fish eggs, getting gobbled by a duck kicks off a harrowing journey that includes a pummeling in the gizzard and an attack by stomach acids. But a few eggs can exit unscathed in a duck’s excrement, possibly helping to spread those fish, including invasive species, to different places, a new study finds.

It’s been an “open question for centuries how these isolated water bodies can be populated by fish,” says fish biologist Patricia Burkhardt-Holm of the University of Basel in Switzerland, who was not involved with the work. This study shows one way that water birds may disperse fish, she says.

Birds’ feathers, feet and feces can spread hardy plant seeds and invertebrates (SN: 1/14/16). But since many fish eggs are soft, researchers didn’t expect that they could survive a bird’s gut, says Orsolya Vincze, an evolutionary biologist at the Centre for Ecological Research in Debrecen, Hungary.
 

In the lab, Vincze and her colleagues fed thousands of eggs from two invasive carp species to eight mallard ducks. About 0.2 percent of ingested eggs, 18 of 8,000, were intact after defecation, the team found. Some of those eggs contained wriggling embryos and a few eggs hatched, the team reports June 22 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. It’s not clear yet whether eggs survive in this way in the wild.

Most of the viable eggs were pooped out within an hour of being eaten, while one took at least four hours to pass. Migratory ducks could travel dozens or possibly hundreds of kilometers before excreting those eggs, the scientists suggest.

Though the surviving egg count is low, their numbers may add up, making bird poop a possibly important vehicle for spreading fish. A single carp can release hundreds of thousands of eggs at a time, Vincze says. And there are huge numbers of mallards and other water birds throughout the world that may gorge themselves on those eggs.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4326Wind Whips Angler Teddy Carr At Oneida LakeUnderwatertimes2011-09-24US
4327Study Finds Aquarium Fishes Are More Aggressive In Reduced Environmentsunderwatertimes2011-09-23US
4328Small Fish Recover Faster Than Large FishUnderwatertimes2011-09-21US
4329The Science Behind the Fishy Smell in Smelly Fishmiaminewtimes2011-09-20CA
4330Anglers Bradley, Carr Land Enough Fish To Qualify For Regional Bassmaster Eventunderwatertimes2011-09-19US
4331Bay of Fundy farmed salmon found in riversCBC News2011-09-16CA
4332Fish shrinkage probed in labBBC News2011-09-18NO
4333Salmon And Other Fish Predators Rely On No Guts, No Glory Survival Tacticunderwatertimes2011-09-15US
4334Climate change boon to UK seafoodBBC News2011-09-15UK
4335World's largest fishing lure, at 355 pounds, is a real whopperpetethomasoutdoors2011-09-13US
4336Ancient Toothy Fish Found in Arctic—Giant Prowled RiversNational Geographic News2011-09-12US
4337The World's Worst Place To Catch FishUnderwatertimes2011-09-07US
4338Colossal Aggregations Of Giant Alien Freshwater Fish As A Potential Biogeochemical HotspotUnderwatertimes2011-10-06GE
4339Iceland joins alliance to tackle ‘ghost’ fishing gear abandoned at seathegrocer2021-03-10UK
4340Dozens change name to salmonTaipei Times2021-03-18TW
4341Рыбаки предупредили о возможных сбоях в добыче самой дешевой рыбыrbc2021-03-17RU
4342Nearly 4 million fish killed by winter storm along Texas coastfox4news2021-03-10US
4343Scientists Discover an 81-Year-Old Snapperhakaimagazine2021-03-04AU
4344Florida biologists find a live turtle inside a fishtimesnownews2011-09-06US
4345Underground For Millions Of Years, Blind Cave Fish Tell Time On Biological ClocksUnderwatertimes2011-09-06CA
4346Chile Says No To Salmon Farming Off Tierra Del FuegoUnderwatertimes2011-09-01CL
4347Re-Emergence Of Salmon In The Thames Not From RestockingUnderwatertimes2011-09-02UK
4348Angler reels in giant 185lb catfish by himself after friends head to the bardailymail2011-08-30SP
4349For the first time, a river is granted official rights and legal personhood in Canadanewswire2021-02-23CA
4350Quebec’s Magpie River first in Canada to be granted personhoodesemag2021-03-16CA

215 216 217 173 of [218 - pages.]