Reef-Geeks  
Go Back   Reef-Geeks > Reef-Geek Forums > Enviro Geeks

Reply
Small fish exploits forbidding environment 
[1 (permalink)] Posted by techguy 07-15-2010, 03:34 PM
Seeker of Knowledge
Default Small fish exploits forbidding environment

This Goby sounds like a hardy species for the home aquarium.

Quote:
Small fish exploits forbidding environment


Jellyfish moved into the oceans off the coast of southwest Africa when the sardine population crashed. Now another small fish is living in the oxygen-depleted zone part-time and turning the once ecologically dead-end jellyfish into dinner, according to an international team of scientists.

"Originally there were sardines in the area but over fishing caused the sardine population to collapse in the 1960s and 1970s," said Victoria A. Braithwaite, professor of fisheries and biology, Penn State. "The sardines never recovered and jellyfish became a huge and serious problem, eating what the sardines had eaten."

Jellyfish are considered a dead end food source because, while they eat lots of small fish and other sea creatures, they have few predators. However, the research team found that the bearded goby, Sufflogobius bibarbatus, a 4-to-6-inch long, 1.5 inch-wide fish, eats jellyfish. Larger fish like hake and mackerel, sea mammals like sea lions and porpoises, and sea birds, like gannets and gulls, eat gobies, putting jellyfish back into the food cycle.

"We don't know if they are eating dead jellyfish from the bottom, or if they are coming up to oxygen-filled layers to eat jellyfish, but they are eating jellyfish," said Braithwaite.

Even stranger than a jellyfish diet is the gobies' use of the dead zone in the area. One reason there were so many sardines and now so many jellyfish is a large area of up-welling water off the southwest coast of Africa from Namibia to South Africa. This deep cold water brings with it large amounts of nutrients. When plankton voraciously eat the nutrients, their populations increase massively. Excess nutrients and dead plankton then fall to the ocean floor.

"A horrible toxic sludge forms, and very few things can live in it except for some bacteria and nematodes," said Braithwaite. "Somehow the gobies can withstand the toxic environment, but we don't know exactly how they are doing it."

Remarkably, the gobies cope without oxygen for hours at a time while they rest on the muddy seabed but remain alert.

"When we touch them with a rod, they show rapid escape responses," said Braithwaite.

Gobies can stay in the anoxic or oxygen-depleted area for at least 10 to 12 hours at a time. The researchers suggest they may be able to remain there even longer. The mud is not just lacking oxygen, but the bacteria that live there use sulfur for energy and produce high levels of hydrogen sulfide, a toxic gas. The researchers report the results of their study in today's (July) 16 issue of Science.

"Normally, other animals cope with anoxia by anaerobic respiration, which causes a build up in lactate," said Braithwaite. "But something else is going on in these gobies as the lactate build up declines after an hour or so without oxygen. Our next step is to look to see what they are doing to cope with anoxia."

For the goby, the anoxic, toxic mud is a perfect hiding place because no predators are willing to enter that environment. The gobies, however, are happy fish in the mud.

"It is a win-win situation where the gobies are using a resource that is usually a dead end in the ocean, the jellyfish," said Braithwaite. "And they are using the toxic mud as a refuge. Together this seems to explain why their population is growing despite the fact that they are now being the main prey species in this unusual ecosystem."
__________________
 
techguy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Everett, Wa
Posts: 2,204
Gameroom cash: $694255
Rep Power: 56 techguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond repute

 

techguy is offline
Quote
[2 (permalink)] Posted by estanoche 07-15-2010, 03:45 PM
I <3 the LEFT COAST!
Default

Too bad they aren't that pretty And who knows what else they eat - anything hardy can't be good for our reef tanks

__________________
SAY NO TO FISH STICKS!!
Put screened and vented lids on your tanks!



My 80 Gal. Reef Tank Build: So this is where all my money goes
My 25 Gal. QT/Angler Cube: A place for my money to QT/grow out
Member/VP of Spokane Coeur d Alene Reef Society

Friend me up on FB too!
 
estanoche's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Spokane, WA
Posts: 3,799
Gameroom cash: $1235065
Rep Power: 116 estanoche has a reputation beyond reputeestanoche has a reputation beyond reputeestanoche has a reputation beyond reputeestanoche has a reputation beyond reputeestanoche has a reputation beyond reputeestanoche has a reputation beyond reputeestanoche has a reputation beyond reputeestanoche has a reputation beyond reputeestanoche has a reputation beyond reputeestanoche has a reputation beyond reputeestanoche has a reputation beyond repute

 

estanoche is offline
Quote
 
[3 (permalink)] Posted by Barbara 07-15-2010, 03:51 PM
Geekette
Default

wow........very cool reading jason.........funny how the life cycle seems to evolve to even toxic situations! thanks for sharing...........will be interesting to hear how the gobies cope with anoxia....btw: that's one ugly little goby!
__________________
 
Barbara's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 11,856
Gameroom cash: $4013819
Rep Power: 100 Barbara has a reputation beyond reputeBarbara has a reputation beyond reputeBarbara has a reputation beyond reputeBarbara has a reputation beyond reputeBarbara has a reputation beyond reputeBarbara has a reputation beyond reputeBarbara has a reputation beyond reputeBarbara has a reputation beyond reputeBarbara has a reputation beyond reputeBarbara has a reputation beyond reputeBarbara has a reputation beyond repute

 

Barbara is offline
Quote
 
[4 (permalink)] Posted by techguy 07-15-2010, 04:00 PM
Seeker of Knowledge
Default

Yes he would not make it on my fish list.
__________________
 
techguy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Everett, Wa
Posts: 2,204
Gameroom cash: $694255
Rep Power: 56 techguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond reputetechguy has a reputation beyond repute

 

techguy is offline
Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Wanted to buy: Overflow box small scubagal Geeks Market 6 07-14-2010 04:50 PM
2 small tanks Wright Place DIY Geeks 8 07-11-2010 04:27 PM
Use less ink and help the environment techguy Enviro Geeks 5 07-07-2010 08:33 AM
Whale poop cleans the environment andrewk529 Enviro Geeks 7 06-17-2010 10:07 AM
DIY small mouth's fish/invert food Kerickson978 DIY Geeks 6 09-11-2009 02:32 PM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:59 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.5.2
Reef-Geeks
vBulletin Skin By: ForumThemes.com
no new posts