Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Concern For Fish Grows As Sizzling B.C. Summer Heats River Waters

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2015 01:36 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The heat wave across British Columbia has pushed temperatures in some waterways to 19 degrees, just one degree below the point where the Department of Fisheries and Oceans predicts there could be damaging effects on fish.
     
    Area resources director Stu Cartwright says important salmon-bearing rivers such as the Fraser, Thompson and Nicola are all affected.
     
    He says juvenile salmon along the Thompson and Fraser systems sometimes spend more than a year in those waters and will be stressed, as will adult fish that begin arriving soon to spawn.
     
    Cartwright says  juvenile salmon in the Nicola River are also at risk.
     
    He says serious problems begin when river water reaches 20 degrees or higher.
     
    Warmer waters carry less oxygen, but fish need more oxygen as waters heat up, harming or killing salmon stocks if rivers get too hot. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Corruption-Related Preliminary Hearing Begins For Ex-Montreal Mayor Michael Applebaum

    Corruption-Related Preliminary Hearing Begins For Ex-Montreal Mayor Michael Applebaum
    MONTREAL — Former interim Montreal mayor Michael Applebaum appeared in court on Monday as his preliminary hearing began on corruption-related charges.

    Corruption-Related Preliminary Hearing Begins For Ex-Montreal Mayor Michael Applebaum

    Judge Allows Critical Senate Report Into Evidence At Trial Of Mike Duffy

    Judge Allows Critical Senate Report Into Evidence At Trial Of Mike Duffy
    OTTAWA — The judge presiding over the trial of Sen. Mike Duffy has allowed a key Senate committee report to be entered into evidence.

    Judge Allows Critical Senate Report Into Evidence At Trial Of Mike Duffy

    3 Dead In Alleged Impaired Driving Crash On Sea-to-Sky Highway, Whistler Cycling Club 'Devastated'

    3 Dead In Alleged Impaired Driving Crash On Sea-to-Sky Highway, Whistler Cycling Club 'Devastated'
    PEMBERTON, B.C. — Three people are dead after a man, who police believe was impaired, drove into a group of cyclists out for a weekend ride northeast of Whistler, B.C.

    3 Dead In Alleged Impaired Driving Crash On Sea-to-Sky Highway, Whistler Cycling Club 'Devastated'

    Female Mounties Alleging Discrimination Seek Class-Action Suit Against RCMP

    Female Mounties Alleging Discrimination Seek Class-Action Suit Against RCMP
    At age 22, Quebec native Joanne Mayer was greeted at her first RCMP posting in Gibsons, B.C., with a handshake and a blunt statement from the sergeant: "We don't think women should be in the force, and especially not French-speaking ones."

    Female Mounties Alleging Discrimination Seek Class-Action Suit Against RCMP

    Mermaid Tails Make A Splash With Swimmers, But Some Cities Ban Them From Pools

    Mermaid Tails Make A Splash With Swimmers, But Some Cities Ban Them From Pools
    Krista Visinski is determined to be a mermaid, even if she's not allowed in the water right now. The Edmonton mother has been preparing for more than a year to become a professional sea nymph

    Mermaid Tails Make A Splash With Swimmers, But Some Cities Ban Them From Pools

    Toronto Man Convicted Of Four Counts Of First-Degree Murder

    Toronto Man Convicted Of Four Counts Of First-Degree Murder
    TORONTO — A Toronto man faces a life prison sentence after being convicted on Saturday of four counts of first-degree murder in the slayings of four men.

    Toronto Man Convicted Of Four Counts Of First-Degree Murder