Talk about anything else: your pets, your car, movies, celebrities, or other things you like. As a reminder, political and religious discussions do not belong in here, nor any other topics that may incite a heated debate! As always keep it clean, please.
Hmmm, wonder what happens to those humans that eat the fish? Or is that just a dollop in the contamination pool? We probably ingest far more contamination by drinking water.
The problem seems to be (here at least) due to common cleaning chemicals in the sewage system acting like oestrogen. It may not only be fish that are affected. Human sperm counts have also been dropping in the western world since WWII. No one has come out and said that these chemicals are to blame but I feel it is stretching coincidence too much.
There is also increased incidence in children, espc. males, being born with genital anomolies (intersex) conditions. I will try to find the reference and add it later.
"It’s not given to anyone to have no regrets; only to decide, through the choices we make, which regrets we’ll have,"
David Weber – In Fury Born
Could it be possible that fish are more susceptible to sex change than other animals.?
It’s a well documented fact that many fish species, both fresh water and salt water, experience sex change during their life, it’s just a natural phenomenon unique to many species of fish. Might it be that their genetic structure is delicate and prone to change with minor environmental influence, albeit those environmental changes are influenced by man made chemicals.
The article below may be of interest.
Kind Regards,
Sally.
Fish Have Sexy Ears
You can tell when a fish has changed sex just by looking at its ears.
At least, Australian marine biologists Stefan Walker and Mark McCormick can – having just pioneered a new breakthrough for studying the behaviour and productivity of fish populations.
The researchers from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University have solved one of the major problems confronting fisheries biologists in determining the sustainability of fish populations – not knowing exactly when fish undergo a sex change.
“Many coral reef fishes - and other fish like barramundi - undergo a sex change at some point in their life – from male to female or female to male,” Stefan explains. “This may be good breeding strategy for them, but it makes it very difficult for researchers to assess the productivity of the fish population if we don’t know for sure when the sex change takes place.”
With almost a third of world fisheries rated as having collapsed and many more under threat, and with coral reefs facing climate and other human-caused stresses, it is vital to assess the productivity of fish populations in order to know how much fishing pressure it can withstand and whether or not it can bounce back. This includes having an understanding of the gender ratios and the age at maturity for females and males.
“Unfortunately in fish that change sex this is hard to get a handle on, because the change can happen at different times. We needed a tool that would tell with accuracy when sex change has taken place or is likely to occur,” he says.
The team decided to focus on the fishes’ ear stones, or otoliths, which develop through the deposition of daily layers, providing an age-based history of the individual’s growth. They proposed that the process of sex change may effect otolith growth, resulting in formation of an age-specific sex-change signature. To their delight they found a dense region in the otolith material that corresponded exactly with the time when their subject fish – a small reef perch – changed from female to male.
Furthermore as soon as the new males acquired a harem of females, their ear-stones began to grow much more rapidly and in a different direction than when they were females. And the more females they had, the faster and larger their ‘ears’ grew.
This new information about sex change and otolith development can help fisheries scientists to more accurately assess the dynamics and productivity of hermaphroditic stocks, the researchers say.
“The sex-change associated otolith signature allows patterns of sex-change and sex-specific growth to be investigated at the individual level. We can now determine the relative amount of time individuals spend as female and male, and how this ratio varies, both naturally and in response to fishing pressure.”
The researchers also have a theory that the larger and different shaped ear-stones in male perches may have something to do with the fine tuning of the fishes’ spatial perception. Like humans, the inner ears of fish are not only receptive to sound, but are also receptive to individual movement and orientation. Sex changing fish may also change their otolith development so as to become more proficient in their new reproductive mode, which often involves moving around more complex terrain and engaging in physical combat with other males associated with competition for female partners. They intend to test this idea in subsequent research.
Their paper Fish ears are sensitive to sex-change is in the latest issue of Biology Letters of the Royal Society Journal.
More information:
Stefan Walker, CoECRS and JCU, 0419 422 815, 61 (0)7 4781 5775
Mark McCormick, COECRS and JCU, +61 (0)7 4781 4048
Jenny Lappin, CoECRS, + 61 (0)7 4781 4222
Jim O’Brien, James Cook University Media Office, 61 (0)7 4781 4822
Watch nature, because it’s our greatest teacher, it moves and flows and moves on again. We can never be free until we disengage, so allow life to flow as you find it. The way it is, is the way it is.