Freshwater fish populations that dwell nearer the poles are outperforming their equatorial counterparts, researchers have found. Large-bodied migratory species such as Atlantic salmon are thriving ...
Climate change impacting freshwater fish species. Credit: University of Bristol Researchers from University of Bristol have discovered that freshwater fish populations inhabiting polar regions are ...
New research reveals that freshwater fish populations located closer to the poles are excelling compared to their equatorial counterparts. Notably, large-bodied migratory species like Atlantic salmon ...
Freshwater fish populations near the poles are outperforming their equatorial counterparts due to climate change. Warming temperatures are creating new habitats at the poleward edges of their ranges, ...
The study, "Climate warming drives population trajectories of freshwater fish" published in PNAS, was based on a dataset of over 10,000 time series and included over 600 species of fishes. Climate ...
Six critically endangered Mekong giant catfish — one of the largest and rarest freshwater ... and endangered species to officials, enabling researchers to reach places where fish have been ...
Freshwater fish populations that dwell nearer the poles are outperforming their equatorial counterparts, researchers have found. Large-bodied migratory species such as Atlantic salmon are thriving as ...
He explained: The phenomenon is relatively common in freshwater fish, including several species of tetras (Characidae—or characins), some catfish, and members of Ambassidae (the Asiatic ...
There are, however, many other easy to keep, attractive, inexpensive and interesting species lurking sometimes unnoticed in shop tanks ... Diamonds sparkle in later life! If ever there was a fish that ...