spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer
Blank spacer
Welcome...
Introduction...
Classroom Activities...
Fall Field Trip...
Spring Angling Clinic...
Community Stewardship...
Upstream Events...
KokaNewz...
Downloads...
Streams (Links)...
Spawners Page...
Sponsors Page...
Contact Page...
Home Page...

Hi, it’s me again, Bob the Fish Guy.

This is the KOKANEWZ page...

Here are some articles about
Kokanee karnival:
[Clicking a link below will open
a new page... you may close the
new page to return here.]

Upcoming Kokanee Karnival School Events

"Volunteers for Fall River Spawning Survey"

"Volunteer Anglers for Crooked River Broodstock Collection"

"Captain helps fund fisheries"
The Bulletin - 01/26/06

"Fish guys' mark 25th"
The Bulletin - 03/25/05

Simple Trick Makes Fish Brains Grow http://www.livescience.com/animalworld/060308_fish_brains.html
By Bjorn Carey
LiveScience Staff Writer
posted: 08 March 2006
07:07 am ET

Trout bred in captivity have smaller brains than those born in the wild, but scientists have recently discovered how to put hatchery-born fish brains on par with fish born in rivers.

All it takes is a few stones.

A little variety in the tank also produces fish that behave more like those born in the wild, which could increase the success rate of restocking rivers and streams.

In the wild, steelhead trout lay their eggs in gravel nests on the riverbed. When the eggs hatch, the baby trout stay near the nest and live off their nutrient-rich yolk sac until they can swim freely.

Hatcheries raise fish in tanks filled with clean, well-aerated water but without environmental features or enrichment.

Researchers at the University of California, Davis scattered a few stones on the tank bottoms of some fish and measured brain size 10 to 12 days after hatching.

Fish reared in tanks with stones and in tanks without had similar brain size. But the fish that grew up with stones had significantly larger cerebellums, the part of the brain that controls movement and body position, like those of fish born in rivers.

Researchers videotaped the fish and found that stone-reared fish also moved around less, perhaps because they used their yolk sac more efficiently.

The findings could affect the design of hatcheries for breeding fish better suited to restock wild populations, the researchers say. The results were detailed last month the journal Experimental Biology.

Kokanee Karnival
Do you have photos of Kokanee Karnival events?
We'd love to see them & put them on our site!
email them to us at:
picx@kokaneekarnival.org
This site is under construction...
Official email contact for the site is HERE...
To contact "Bob The Fish Guy" click HERE
Webmaster email contact for the site is HERE...
This page was last updated on Thursday, March 27, 2008

 

spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
Blank spacer