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

    Vancouver Becomes First In Canada To Regulate Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

    Vancouver Becomes First In Canada To Regulate Medical Marijuana Dispensaries
    In a eight to three vote, councillors approved imposing a $30,000 licensing fee, requiring stores to be located 300 metres from schools, community centres and each other, and banning shops from certain areas.

    Vancouver Becomes First In Canada To Regulate Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

    Search Underway For Hiker Duo Who Didn't Return From B.C.'s Southern Interior

    Search Underway For Hiker Duo Who Didn't Return From B.C.'s Southern Interior
    A search for Lynne Carmody and Rick Moynan began Monday near the village of Keremeos.  

    Search Underway For Hiker Duo Who Didn't Return From B.C.'s Southern Interior

    Newly Appointed B.C. Committee To Review Mining Rules After Tailings Pond Breach

    Bill Bennett says a committee will determine how to best enact seven recommendations from an expert report into last year's tailings pond breach in the Cariboo region.

    Newly Appointed B.C. Committee To Review Mining Rules After Tailings Pond Breach

    Fired B.C. Workers Call For Public Inquiry Into Health Research Debacle

    In a letter to Health Minister Terry Lake, the seven workers and the sister of a man who killed himself shortly after being dismissed said the inquiry must have the power and authority to subpoena people and get statements under oath. 

    Fired B.C. Workers Call For Public Inquiry Into Health Research Debacle

    Woman Remains In Serious Condition, Three Others In Hospital After Megabus Crash Near Lancaster, Ont

    Woman Remains In Serious Condition, Three Others In Hospital After Megabus Crash Near Lancaster, Ont
    The Ontario Provincial Police say their investigation continues into the collision between a double-decker Megabus and a tractor-trailer Tuesday afternoon.

    Woman Remains In Serious Condition, Three Others In Hospital After Megabus Crash Near Lancaster, Ont

    Former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong Accuses Lawyer Of Sullying Dead Wife's Reputation

    VANCOUVER — Former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong raised his voice and thumped his fist during testimony as he defended himself at a British Columbia Supreme Court defamation trial on Tuesday.

    Former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong Accuses Lawyer Of Sullying Dead Wife's Reputation