Thursday, 30 May 2013

Jellyfish blooms may endanger fish stocks - India Education Diary

Debarjun Saha | 06:32 |


via Science - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNEdCnZKgdaMebkVj2TAdNWWVOmoaw&url=http://www.indiaeducationdiary.in/showEE.asp?newsid=22748
  Related News
CBSE class X results to be published today
Thursday, May 30, 2013

New Delhi: The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) will declare its class X results on Thursday morning at 10:00 AM.


'Dun & Bradstreet - Corporate Award 2012' For Hindustan Zinc
Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Report by India Education bureau, Jaipur: Hindustan Zinc, an operating company of Vedanta in Zinc, Lead and Silver business, was honoured with the prestigious 'Dun & Bradstreet - Corporate Award 2012' under non-ferrous metals sector in a glittering award ceremony at Hotel Trident, Mumbai on May 28, 2013.


Dhamra Port organises summer camp for school children
Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Report by India Education bureau, Dhamra: A summer camp for school children from the port periphery villages was organised by Dharma Port Company Ltd (DPCL) from 25th May to 28th May 2013 in the port premises.


Second SAARC Regional Workshop on Child Labour to be held in New Delhi
Tuesday, May 28, 2013

New Delhi: The 2nd SAARC Regional Workshop on Child Labour is beginning tomorrow here in New Delhi to chalk out and promote comprehensive and gender-sensitive approaches to understanding and responding to child labour; showcasing strategies and initiatives that have promoted learning and action to ending child labour and protecting adolescents at work; and fostering cooperation through the SAARC mechanisms and partnerships on the issue.


Cassava's huge potential as 21st Century crop
Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Rome: Save and Grow, an environmentally-friendly farming model promoted by FAO, can sustainably increase cassava yields by up to 400 percent and help turn this staple from a poor people's food into a 21st Century crop,  FAO said today.


Rome: Surges in jellyfish populations may be one reason for a drop in fish stocks observed in the Mediterranean and Black Sea, according to a new report published by FAO. 

Overfishing, which removes top predators from the sea,  is one of the factors behind jellyfish "blooms",  or suddenly increased numbers. A  "vicious circle" can then follow in which  large numbers of medusae feed on fish larvae and juveniles , and "further reduce the resilience of fish populations already impacted by overfishing," according to the report, from FAO's General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean. 

Jellyfish "might be the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back" says the Review of Jellyfish Blooms in the Mediterranean and Black Sea. 

Normally, only the impact of human fishing activities is taken into account in setting sustainable  fishing limits, the report says. But jellyfish  can also have a high impact on fish eggs and larvae, either directly or by competing for the same food sources. They  should thus be considered in any ecosystems-based approach to fisheries management. 

Overwhelming impact 

The severe effect jellyfish can have on fish stocks was demonstrated in the early  1980s  when Mnemiopsis leidyi, a jellyfish species normally resident on the Atlantic, was accidentally introduced into the Black Sea and had such "overwhelming" impact on fish populations that  fisheries were put "on their knees". 

The problem was only resolved after another invader species  Beroe ovate, which feeds on Mnemiopsis, also arrived in the Black sea. 

In the Adriatic a drop in fish populations was also observed 20-30 years ago with a successive surges of mauve-coloured, Pelagia noctiluca  jellyfish that deliver a vicious sting. The combined effect of  Pelagia  predation on the one hand and human overfishing on the other played a large part in reducing reproductive adult fish "to a threshold that made recovery of fish populations less effective". 

"In the past, the system could cope with episodes of jellyfish abundance , but in the case of the early 1980s blooms, the system went in another direction and is still not back to "normal" in pre-Pelagia years," the report states. 

Jellyfish ocean 

Jellyfish have now become persistently abundant in almost all the oceans of the world,  leading some experts to speak of  "a global regime shift from a fish to a jellyfish ocean" in which  jellyfish supplant fish. 

Although the reasons for the phenomenon are not fully understood, they may include, besides overfishing: 

• Global warming, which enhances species that thrive at tropical latitudes. 

• Eutrophication, which increases nutrients in the water. 

• Widespread use of sea walls to prevent coastal erosion and the large number of tourist harbours, which make an ideal habitat for those jellyfish who go through a stage as polyps in their early lives. 

Measures advocated to prevent or cope with jellyfish blooms include: 

• Incorporate jellyfish research into fisheries research. 

• Develop jellyfish products for food and medicine. Some jellyfish species are a food source in several countries. 

• Among other possibilities, the discovery of an "immortal jellyfish", Turritopsis nutricula, capable of reversing its ageing process, holds out the promise of developing powerful rejuvenation products for humans. 

• Establish early warning systems of jellyfish blooms, with protective barriers for aquaculture farms. 

• Taking steps to reduce overfishing, greenhouse gas emissions and the causes of eutrophication "would undoubtedly improve environmental quality at large and might, thus, also reduce the present prevalence of jellyfish," the report adds.





ifttt
Put the internet to work for you. via Personal Recipe 2954071

No comments:

Post a Comment

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More

Search