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

    Fewer Manitoba Foster Kids In Hotels, But Might Still Have To Be Used: Minister

    Fewer Manitoba Foster Kids In Hotels, But Might Still Have To Be Used: Minister
    WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government says fewer foster children are being put up in hotels, but the accommodation may still have to be used occasionally.

    Fewer Manitoba Foster Kids In Hotels, But Might Still Have To Be Used: Minister

    Vancouver Police Issue Warning About Masked Asian Man Who Attempted Sexual Assault On 21-Year-Old

    Vancouver Police Issue Warning About Masked Asian Man Who Attempted Sexual Assault On 21-Year-Old
    Sgt. Randy Fincham says the 21-year-old woman was asleep in her bed at about 6 a.m. when she realized a stranger in dark clothing had entered the room

    Vancouver Police Issue Warning About Masked Asian Man Who Attempted Sexual Assault On 21-Year-Old

    Police Played On Amanda Korody's Obedience To Pull Her Into Terror Plot: Lawyer

    An accused terrorist described as the perfect, submissive, Muslim wife lived an isolated life marred by poverty and drug-addiction before undercover police ensnared her in a plot to blow up the provincial legislature, a B.C. court has heard

    Police Played On Amanda Korody's Obedience To Pull Her Into Terror Plot: Lawyer

    Unionized Construction Workers Reach Deal For Labour Stability On Site C

    Unionized Construction Workers Reach Deal For Labour Stability On Site C
    VICTORIA — Union and non-union workers as well as independent First Nations' contractors will build the $9-billion Site C hydroelectric dam in northern British Columbia under a deal announced Wednesday.

    Unionized Construction Workers Reach Deal For Labour Stability On Site C

    45 Per Cent Of Metro Vancouver Transit-Tax Ballots In As Deadline Looms

    45 Per Cent Of Metro Vancouver Transit-Tax Ballots In As Deadline Looms
    Elections BC says its has received and screened nearly 45 per cent of the transit-tax plebiscite packages mailed to Metro Vancouver residents two days before voting closes.

    45 Per Cent Of Metro Vancouver Transit-Tax Ballots In As Deadline Looms

    Former Vancouver Island Teacher Andrew Olson Charged With Sexual Exploitation, Child Luring

    Former Vancouver Island Teacher Andrew Olson Charged With Sexual Exploitation, Child Luring
    SHAWNIGAN LAKE, B.C. — A Vancouver Island private school says a teacher accused of a series of sexual offences against young people is no longer employed at its facility.

    Former Vancouver Island Teacher Andrew Olson Charged With Sexual Exploitation, Child Luring