"/>

一级做a免费观看大全视频,中文字幕乱码无限2019,日日麻批40分钟免费视频播放,精品专区性色av,国产性夜夜春夜夜爽,岛国三级片免费看久久,久久五月天和激情网

Chester Zoo joins battle to save Bermuda's "golf fish" from extinction

Source: Xinhua    2018-03-14 01:50:39

LONDON, March 13 (Xinhua) -- Most people have heard of gold fish, but how about golf fish? Conservationists from Britain have launch a battle to save from extinction a rare breed of fish that's only habitation are golf-course ponds on the paradise island of Bermuda.

Experts from Chester Zoo in northern England have set up a brand new breeding program to help save rare the Bermudian killifish species from disappearing.

The tiny killifish live in just 14 ponds around Bermuda's golf courses. The problem is that the ponds can be very fragile and the smallest change could push them to extinction.

Chester Zoo has joined forces with the Bermudian government to preserve the future of the fish by bringing a number to the zoo. There, experts are battling to breed the species as a vital safety net to the populations in Bermuda.

Many of the ponds have underground links to the sea so the fish have to adapt to different levels of salinity, temperature and dissolved oxygen which vary throughout the year.

"A relatively small change in the local environment could wipe out these species forever, losing millions of years of evolution and further damaging the rich biodiversity of our planet," said a spokesman at Chester Zoo.

The zoo has established a small population of the fish in Chester, setting up the Britain's first ever breeding program for the species.

To help with breeding programme success, zookeepers have tagged the parent fish in the group at the zoo with visible silicone implants to help tell them apart from their offspring.

Dr Gerardo Garcia, a curator at Chester Zoo, said: "Without the existence of these courses and the protection they provide for these surrounding natural water features, unique habitats and species could have been lost.

"We know how perilous the situation is for the Bermudian killifish and we are going to try everything possible to help save them from extinction. We will fight for the future of the Bermudian killifish."

Dr Mark Outerbridge, Wildlife Ecologist at the Department of Environment and Natural Resources in Bermuda, said: "Chester Zoo has proven to be a valued ally in the ex-situ breeding and husbandry of four island endemics, the killifish, a skink and two species of land snails. Knowing that there are established populations of these very rare animals in captivity outside of Bermuda gives me greater confidence in their longer term chances of survival."

Editor: yan
Related News
Xinhuanet

Chester Zoo joins battle to save Bermuda's "golf fish" from extinction

Source: Xinhua 2018-03-14 01:50:39

LONDON, March 13 (Xinhua) -- Most people have heard of gold fish, but how about golf fish? Conservationists from Britain have launch a battle to save from extinction a rare breed of fish that's only habitation are golf-course ponds on the paradise island of Bermuda.

Experts from Chester Zoo in northern England have set up a brand new breeding program to help save rare the Bermudian killifish species from disappearing.

The tiny killifish live in just 14 ponds around Bermuda's golf courses. The problem is that the ponds can be very fragile and the smallest change could push them to extinction.

Chester Zoo has joined forces with the Bermudian government to preserve the future of the fish by bringing a number to the zoo. There, experts are battling to breed the species as a vital safety net to the populations in Bermuda.

Many of the ponds have underground links to the sea so the fish have to adapt to different levels of salinity, temperature and dissolved oxygen which vary throughout the year.

"A relatively small change in the local environment could wipe out these species forever, losing millions of years of evolution and further damaging the rich biodiversity of our planet," said a spokesman at Chester Zoo.

The zoo has established a small population of the fish in Chester, setting up the Britain's first ever breeding program for the species.

To help with breeding programme success, zookeepers have tagged the parent fish in the group at the zoo with visible silicone implants to help tell them apart from their offspring.

Dr Gerardo Garcia, a curator at Chester Zoo, said: "Without the existence of these courses and the protection they provide for these surrounding natural water features, unique habitats and species could have been lost.

"We know how perilous the situation is for the Bermudian killifish and we are going to try everything possible to help save them from extinction. We will fight for the future of the Bermudian killifish."

Dr Mark Outerbridge, Wildlife Ecologist at the Department of Environment and Natural Resources in Bermuda, said: "Chester Zoo has proven to be a valued ally in the ex-situ breeding and husbandry of four island endemics, the killifish, a skink and two species of land snails. Knowing that there are established populations of these very rare animals in captivity outside of Bermuda gives me greater confidence in their longer term chances of survival."

[Editor: huaxia]
010020070750000000000000011105521370370081


一级做a免费观看大全视频,中文字幕乱码无限2019,日日麻批40分钟免费视频播放,精品专区性色av,国产性夜夜春夜夜爽,岛国三级片免费看久久,久久五月天和激情网 国产视频观看91 国产00在线视频国产 国产综合色视频久久久 久久成人国产精品一区二区 高清无码免费黄色网站