|חדשות| טנזניה: תפסו דג שנצפה באזור לאחרונה לפני 80 שנה
ערכתי לאחרונה בתאריך 17.07.07 בשעה 23:32 בברכה, ilanka
מדובר בדג Coelacanth, שתתי-מינים שלו קיימים בכל מיני מקומות אחרים.
Tanzania fishermen catch endangered fish Fishermen have caught a rare and endangered fish, the coelacanth, off the coast of the Indian Ocean archipelago of Zanzibar, a researcher said on Monday.
"Fishermen informed us that they caught a strange fish in their nets. We rushed to Nungwi (the northern reaches of Zanzibar) to find it‘s a coelacanth, a rare fish thought to have become extinct when it disappeared from fossil records 80 million years ago," said Nariman Jiddawi of the Institute of Marine Sciences, which is part of the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania‘s commercial capital.
"Zanzibar will join a list of sites of having the rare fish caught in its own waters," said Jiddawi, adding the catch weighed 59.5 pounds and measured 4.4 feet.
Mussa Aboud Jume, director of fisheries in Zanzibar, said that the coelacanth will be preserved and put on display at the Zanzibar Museum.
Coelacanths are the only living animals to have a fully functional intercranial joint, a division separating the ear and brain from the nasal organs and eye, according to an Institute of Marine Sciences statement. http://www.leadingthecharge.com/ViewArticle.aspx?id=133490&source=2
...לנסח את השאלה נכון - זה אפילו יותר חשוב מהתשובה....
עד עכשיו הוא שרד יפה יפה 80 שנה עכשיו יש מודעות והוא יכחד בגלל שאנחנו צריכים לדאוג לו \= לא יודע אם אנחנו הורסים משהו אבל לא ממש עוזרים או צריכים בכלל לעזור לטבע...תודה על הכתבה
An extremely rare "living fossil" caught by a fisherman in Indonesia is being examined by scientists. The 1.3m-long (4.3ft), 50kg (110lb) coelacanth is only the second ever to have been captured in Asia and has been described as a "significant find".
An autopsy and genetic tests are now being carried out to determine more about the specimen.
Coelacanths provide researchers with a window into the past; their fossil record dates back 350 million years.
These fish are odd in appearance, looking almost as if they have legs because of their large-lobed fins - they are sometimes dubbed "old four legs". The blue fish can also perform headstands, hovering with their head just over the sea floor, possibly to detect food.
Scientists previously thought the fish group had died out about 70 million years ago, but were shocked when in 1938 a species was caught in a fishing net off the coast of South Africa.
Since then, more than 300 of the modern coelacanth species (Latimeria chalumnae) have been found in the waters around the Comoros Islands, which are situated in the Western Indian Ocean, and the eastern coast of Africa.