Close X
Friday, November 15, 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

    Tickets For Pan Am And Parapan Am Games Cheaper To Buy On Canada Day

    Tickets For Pan Am And Parapan Am Games Cheaper To Buy On Canada Day
    TORONTO — People who have procrastinated in buying tickets for the upcoming Pan Am and Parapan Am Games might want to wait a little longer.

    Tickets For Pan Am And Parapan Am Games Cheaper To Buy On Canada Day

    Government Stays Mostly Mum On Where Celebrate Canada Funding Getting Spent

    Government Stays Mostly Mum On Where Celebrate Canada Funding Getting Spent
    And although the money is meant to help Canadians celebrate the red and white, it appears — based on what little information the government has released — that a lot of it goes to ridings that are Tory blue.

    Government Stays Mostly Mum On Where Celebrate Canada Funding Getting Spent

    TransCanada: Alberta's Tougher CO2 Rules Bolster Case For Keystone XL

    The Calgary-based company makes that argument in a letter to Secretary of State John Kerry and other American officials as the U.S. regulatory process nears its seventh anniversary.

    TransCanada: Alberta's Tougher CO2 Rules Bolster Case For Keystone XL

    B.C. Man's Refusal To Admit To Sexual Assault Conviction Sends Message: Lawyer

    B.C. Man's Refusal To Admit To Sexual Assault Conviction Sends Message: Lawyer
    A lawyer for a woman who is accusing serial killer Robert Pickton's brother of sexual assault and threats says a jury must send him a message that his alleged actions were wrong.

    B.C. Man's Refusal To Admit To Sexual Assault Conviction Sends Message: Lawyer

    Delhi Assembly Demands Action Against Tytler In 1984 Riot Case

    Delhi Assembly Demands Action Against Tytler In 1984 Riot Case
    The Delhi assembly on Tuesday strongly condemned the killing of Sikhs in the national capital during the 1984 riots and passed a resolution asking the central government to register an FIR against Congress leader Jagdish Tytler in a riot case.

    Delhi Assembly Demands Action Against Tytler In 1984 Riot Case

    Metro Vancouver's Transportation Plebiscite Results On Thursday: Elections BC

    Metro Vancouver's Transportation Plebiscite Results On Thursday: Elections BC
    Residents of Metro Vancouver were asked to vote on whether they supported a half-per-cent sales tax for $7.5 billion in upgrades to transportation infrastructure in the region.

    Metro Vancouver's Transportation Plebiscite Results On Thursday: Elections BC