A stepped water feature in the centre of campus surprises with its rich aquatic life and potential as a site for demonstrating biodiversity.
articles
How to Prevent Mosquitofish from Spreading in Water Ecosystems?
Preventing the introduction of the mosquitofish and removing its population are the most effective actions to control the dispersal of this exotic fish in ponds and lakes, according to a study published in the journal Science of the Total Environment. Neither the presence of predators nor the degradation of the quality of water and natural habitat are a threat to this invasive species –from the Atlantic coast in North America- which competes against and moves local species away.
The new study, carried out in water ecosystems close to urban environments of the Barcelona provincial area, is signed by the experts Oriol Cano Rocabayera, Adolfo de Sostoa, Lluís Coll and Alberto Maceda, from the Faculty of Biology and the Biodiversity Research Institute of the UB (IRBio).
An exotic species threatening local fish
The mosquitofish (Gambusia holbrooki) is an edacious exotic fish regarded as one of the most dangerous invasive species at a global scale according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (UICN). It was brought to Spain in 1921 for the biological control of mosquitoes –carrying diseases such as malaria- and is now included in the catalogues of exotic invasive species of the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food and the autonomous communities.
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Image Credit: University of Barcelona
100% Renewables Doesn’t Equal Zero-Carbon Energy, and the Difference Is Growing
While 160 companies around the world have committed to use “100 percent renewable energy,” that does not mean “100 percent carbon-free energy.” The difference will grow as power grids become less reliant on fossil power, according to a new Stanford study published today in Joule.
Producing Electricity at Estuaries Using Light and Osmosis
Most renewable power technologies are weather dependent.
Soil Communities Threatened by Destruction, Instability of Amazon Forests, New Study Finds
The clearing and subsequent instability of Amazonian forests are among the greatest threats to tropical biodiversity conservation today.
For a Texas Ranching Family, Toxic Coal Ash Pollution Hits Home
In 1954, the Peeler family signed an agreement to lease 6,000 acres of their 25,000-acre Texas ranch for a lignite coal mine.