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Conservation & Environment
Real trouble could be ahead for Gulf fish, wildlife, researcher warns |
Real trouble could be ahead for Gulf fish, wildlife, researcher warns |
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Has the canary in Louisiana’s coastal ecosystem started coughing? That question echoed across the Gulf last week after the release of a study led by LSU revealed that the Gulf killifish, a lowly marsh minnow known locally as a “cocahoe,” showed signs of the hydrocarbon poisoning that was a precursor to the collapse of some fish and wildlife populations in Alaska after the Exxon Valdez spill.
More worrisome, researchers said, those affects were registered even though the toxins — polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons — are present in levels so small they are labeled “trace” or “undetectable.” Read the complete story from The Times-Picayune.
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Monterey Bay's historic "wetfish" industry is under attack by extremist groups who claim overfishing is occurring. Touting studies with faulty calculations, activists are lobbying federal regulators to massively limit fishing, if not ban these fisheries outright. Apparently the facts don’t matter to groups with an anti-fishing agenda






