Close X
Saturday, November 16, 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

    RCMP Officer Convicted Of Perjury In Dziekanski Taser Death Up For Sentencing

    RCMP Officer Convicted Of Perjury In Dziekanski Taser Death Up For Sentencing
    Richard Peck is recommending a sentence of between a year and a half to three years for former RCMP corporal Banjamin (Monty) Robinson.

    RCMP Officer Convicted Of Perjury In Dziekanski Taser Death Up For Sentencing

    More Canadian Parents Opting For Home-schooling: Fraser Institute

    More Canadian Parents Opting For Home-schooling: Fraser Institute
    It says 21,662 Canadian children were registered as home-schooled students in 2012, an increase of 29 per cent over a five-year period, but acknowledges there are more homes-schooled kids not officially registered.

    More Canadian Parents Opting For Home-schooling: Fraser Institute

    Two Years After Promising Tougher Drunk Driving Laws, Tories Introduce A Plan

    OTTAWA — Two years after they first made the commitment, the Conservatives are finally introducing a renewed crackdown on drunk drivers.

    Two Years After Promising Tougher Drunk Driving Laws, Tories Introduce A Plan

    Woman Settles Human Rights Complaint With Regina Barber Shop That Turned Her Away

    REGINA — The owner of a Regina barber shop has apologized to a woman who was refused a haircut.

    Woman Settles Human Rights Complaint With Regina Barber Shop That Turned Her Away

    Alberta First Nations Have 70 Per Cent Higher Risk Of Stillborn Births: Study

    Alberta First Nations Have 70 Per Cent Higher Risk Of Stillborn Births: Study
    Researchers from the University of Alberta examined more than 425,000 births in Alberta from 2000 to 2009.

    Alberta First Nations Have 70 Per Cent Higher Risk Of Stillborn Births: Study

    Jet That Crashed Short Of Halifax Runway Was Mechanically Sound: Report

    Jet That Crashed Short Of Halifax Runway Was Mechanically Sound: Report
    HALIFAX — There were no mechanical problems with an Air Canada passenger jet that crashed about 200 metres short of the runway at the Halifax airport in March, the Transportation Safety Board says in a preliminary report released Tuesday.

    Jet That Crashed Short Of Halifax Runway Was Mechanically Sound: Report