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Do you remember the movie “Finding Nemo”? About a little
fish who is trying to find his way home? According to a study conducted by team
of scientists from Australia,
France,
and the U.S, coral reef fish are indeed able to make their way back home, in
case they were dispersed by ocean currents. The scientists used a new tagging
technique to track down to track two
populations of fish, including the endearing orange, black, and white
reef-dwelling clownfish made famous in the movie “Finding Nemo.”
The tagging method was developed by Simon Thorrold at WHOI
and it involves injecting minute quantities of harmless stable barium isotopes
into breeding female fish.
The tagging method itself represents an important achievement
as is the first time whn scientists have successfully used a new internal
tagging method in the field, as well as in the lab.
The study took place in coral reefs located in a marine
protected area in Papua, New Guinea and the scientists found
that young fish from the clownfish (Amphiprion percula) and the vagabond
butterflyfish (Chaetodon vagabundus) species made it back to their home reef
about 60 percent of the time.
The study is also a premiere because is the first comparison
between two fish species with different reproductive strategies and dispersal
patterns.
“If we understand how fish larvae disperse, it will enable
better design of marine protected areas, and this will help in the rebuilding
of threatened fish populations,” said Almany, lead author on the Science
article.
“Just as importantly,” added Almany “40 percent of the
juveniles came from other reefs that are at least ten kilometers (five miles)
away, which indicates significant exchange between populations separated by
open sea. This shows how marine protected areas can contribute to maintaining
fish populations outside no-fishing zones.”
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