Ancient fish ponds in the Bolivian savanna supported human settlement 
BR Source: PLOS 5/15/2019

A network of fish ponds supported a permanent human settlement in the seasonal drylands of Bolivia more than one thousand years ago, according to a new study.

A network of fish ponds supported a permanent human settlement in the seasonal drylands of Bolivia more than one thousand years ago, according to a new study published May 15, 2019 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Gabriela Prestes-Carneiro of Federal University of Western Para, Brazil, and colleagues. The study is the first to document the full range of fish species likely kept in these constructed ponds, and provides new insights into how humans modified the savannah environment to cope with the months-long droughts that characterize this region of the Amazon Basin.
 

The Llanos de Mojos region in central Bolivia is a vast plain which receives flooding rains from October to April, and then virtually no precipitation the rest of the year. Beginning about 500 AD, humans began to create monumental earthen mounds in the region, on which permanent settlements were established. One, called Loma Salavtierra, located more than 50 kilometers from the nearest major river, has become an important archaeological site. Previous work has established the existence of a series of shallow ponds rimmed by low earthen walls and connected by canals, which are believed to have captured rainfall and stored it throughout the dry season, potentially built to serve multiple purposes including water storage, drainage, and fish maangement.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
51Nature reserve to be created next to new nuclear plant that will kill tonnes of fish a yeartelegraph2024-04-16UK
52San Antonio angler reels in 30-inch unusual catch in neighborhood pondmysanantonio2024-04-13US
53Girls record catfish sparks controversyusatoday2024-04-18US
54Stolen tropical fish returned to Ottawa Valley restaurantCBC News2024-04-19CA
55Soft sea creature – with red scaleless body — discovered in Japanmiamiherald2024-04-19JP
56This invasive alien fish is threatening the Guadalquivir ecosystemd1softballnews2024-04-14US
57Thai Officials Warn Releasing Fish Into Nature Wont Bring Good Karmayahoo2024-04-15TH
58Truck crash spills live salmon into wrong Oregon riverScientists push new paradigm of animal consciousness, saying even insectsnbcnews2024-04-19US
59Raising fish and a workforce with an economic development grantalleghenyfront2024-04-19US
60Indigenous Marine Scientist Studies Fish Feeding Evolution in Panamasmithsonianmag2024-04-19US
61Boops, hums and farts: The mysterious world of fish communicationBBC News2024-04-19US
62Officials devise unconventional plan to eliminate invasive fish speciesOutdoors2024-04-21US
63Sea-run brook trout in Hudson Bay tributariesfinandfield2017-08-23CA
64Supporting small-scale fisheries in an aquaculture worldthefishsite2024-05-03NO
65Regal Springs pledges to use 100 percent of each tilapia by 2030thefishsite2024-05-03ID
66US Regulators Maintain Fishing Quota for Valuable Baby EelsAssociated Press2024-05-01US
67The Number of Fish on US Overfishing List Reaches an All-Time LowAssociated Press2024-05-06US
68British garbageman reels in record-size fish weighing 64.4kg9news2024-05-01AU
69Mad keen teen fisherman reels in $1 million barramundi in NT competition9news2024-04-30AU
7050-foot sea creature washes up on Delaware shoremiamiherald2024-05-06US
71Theres no opening day hype, but fishing in North Dakota is better than everechopress2024-05-04US
72Fishing guides weigh in on strategies for the upcoming Minnesota walleye openerechopress2024-05-04US
73DNR shares fishy facts in advance of Minnesota Fishing Openerechopress2024-05-04US
74Everything you need to know for Minnesota fishing openerechopress2024-05-03US
75Local woman finds passion as fly fishing guidethecantoncitizen2024-04-26CA

197 198 199 2 of [200 - pages.]