Welcome, Guest! - Register - Login, Online: 197
Moldova.org / It EnglishEnglish | RomanianRomanian | RussianRussian  




Leo
23 July - 22 August


Someone new breezes into your life today and might give you reason to rethink some deeply held opinion. It's a good time to open up to your friends and maybe take a new direction in life.




—— Today —— —— Tomorow ——
 
Chisinau 10 days
Hi: 26 ˚C
Low: 18 ˚C
Hi: 26 ˚C
Low: 17 ˚C
 
Bucharest 10 days
Hi: 26 ˚C
Low: 15 ˚C
Hi: 30 ˚C
Low: 16 ˚C
 
Moscow 10 days
Hi: 25 ˚C
Low: 14 ˚C
Hi: 21 ˚C
Low: 12 ˚C
 
Kyev 10 days
Hi: 29 ˚C
Low: 21 ˚C
Hi: 22 ˚C
Low: 16 ˚C

Study; Great Lakes gulls in poor health

It might be assumed stocking the Great Lakes with exotic salmon and trout might be good for gulls but a Canadian study puts that assumption in doubt.

Craig Hebert and colleagues at the Canadian Wildlife Research Center in Ottawa analyzed 25 years of data on the gulls and discovered the Great Lakes birds are in poor health in many areas.

The scientists said fish are the gulls' staple diet, so it would be natural to assume more fish would mean better dining. Instead, the researchers said the addition of species such as exotic salmon hasn't been good for the birds. Tests of their tissues showed an increased in transfats associated with food produced by humans, suggesting the birds have been forced to make a shift from fish to terrestrial food, including garbage, Hebert said.

Experts aren't sure why the birds are eating more garbage when exotic salmon and trout are added to the waters but Herbert said the birds might be out-competed for their favorite prey of smaller fish. And when fish are unavailable, the birds turn to land for their foraging.

The study appeared in the April issue of the journal Ecology.

Copyright 2008 by United Press International

Publication date: 15 May 2008   

Source: UPI-1-20080515-11351400-bc-canada-greatlakes.xml

Archive

Bookmark this news
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

ADs



Latest news

Scientists work on garbage for gas
U.S. companies are racing to bring gasoline made from wood chips, garbage, crop waste and other materials to market.The U.S. government is offering grants and subsidies to get the plants started in an effort to meet a mandated 36 billion gallons of biofuels a year by 2022, The New York Times said Thursday. Plans for about 28 different plants are in various stages of development.KL Process Design Group in Wyoming may be the first to reach the commercial market, the newspaper said. The company is more...

24.07.2008 - Yahoo releases Zimbra Desktop
24.07.2008 - EPA won't regulate 11 water contaminants
24.07.2008 - Next generation 911 needed, speakers say
24.07.2008 - UPI NewsTrack Health and Science News
24.07.2008 - Study: Gene directs traffic in DNA repair
24.07.2008 - Study: High CO2 environment damages reefs
24.07.2008 - Ancient tomb found on Italian coast
24.07.2008 - Cement plants spew toxic mercury
24.07.2008 - Dental death in Washington 5th in 3 years

The most read news




What is New?


© 1997-2008 moldova.org - All rights reserved. moldova.org is a registered mark by Moldova Foundation.
Privacy Policy. Please read the terms of use when you can benefit from our services. Design and programming by Adpixel.biz