Show China
·web search    ·local search  
     
 
 
   Christmas tree decorated with diamonds to be on sale
 Protester goes nude for vegetarianism
 Genetically modified mice fearless of cat
 World's most expensive dessert
 Jewellery automation mouse to be auctioned
 Texas Snake Man: new record with 87 rattlesnakes
 Rome Int'l Furniture Exhibition
 Worm dishes: new eating fashion among white-collars
 Rare white tortoise fished out of Lake Poyang
 Halloween for animals
 Rare white tortoise fished out of Lake Poyang
 100-year-old woman glides into record books
 What do you think of my new haircut?
 Merlini survives longest underwater without air
 Wonderful coincidences!
 Decorations for Year of Mouse
 Mud bath in Turkey
 Maine Coon cat
 World's fattest man
 Tug with nose
 Sino-Australian diplomatic relations marked
 Paper butterflies bless for Beijing Olympics
 Chinese artist holds exhibition in Germany
 Hong Kong children recite Chinese classical texts
 Ethnic group culture, art festival held in N China
 Tibetan clay sculptures: Tshatsha
 Sting on stage
 Dancing Tibetan men
 Dancing Tibetan girl
 Chickens make a painting

 
 China A-Z HOME
Tropical fish can live for months out of water
Close

A tropical fish meanders through the sea waters of Kurumba island in the Maldives, Nov. 12, 2007. (China Daily/Agencies)


    BEIJING, Nov. 15 -- A tropical fish that lives in mangrove swamps across the Americas can survive out of water for months at a time, similar to how animals adapted to land millions of years ago, a new study shows.

    The Mangrove Rivulus, a type of small tropical killifish, seeks refuge in shallow pools of water in crab burrows, coconut shells or even old beer cans in the tropical mangrove swamps of Belize, the United States and Brazil.

    When their habitat dries up, they live on the land in logs, said Scott Taylor, a researcher at the Brevard County Environmentally Endangered Lands Program in central Florida.

    The fish, whose scientific name is Rivulus marmoratus, can grow as large as three inches. They group together in logs hollowed out by insects and breathe air through their skin instead of their gills until they can find water again.

    The scientific breakthrough came after a trip to Belize.

    "We kicked over a log and the fish just came tumbling out," Taylor told Reuters in neighboring Guatemala by telephone. He said he will publish his study on the fish in The American Naturalist journal early next year.

    In lab tests, Taylor said he found the fish can survive for up to 66 days out of water without eating, and their metabolism keeps functioning.

    Clue to Evolution

    Some other fish can survive briefly out of water. The walking catfish found in Southeast Asia can wriggle over land for hours at a time, while lungfish found in Australia, Africa and South America can survive out of water, but only in a dormant state.

    No other known fish can be out of water as long as the Mangrove Rivulus and remain active, according to Patricia Wright, a biologist at Canada's University of Guelph.

    "They can survive for weeks without really dropping their metabolic rate. They remain relatively responsive and active for weeks in air," she said.

    The fish may hold clues to how animals evolved over time.

    "These animals live in an environment that is similar to conditions that existed millions of year ago, when animals began making the transition from water onto land," she added.

    Surviving on land is not the only unusual behavior exhibited by the fish. They have both testes and ovaries and essentially clone themselves by laying their own, already fertilized eggs.

    "This is probably the coolest fish around, not only do they have a very bizarre sex life, but they really don't meet standard behavioral criteria for fishes," said Taylor in a summary of his paper.

    (Source: China Daily/Agencies)

Close
 
 
  Related News
Show China
| Cooperation | About us | Contact Us |
Address:Huatian Mansion 26F,Lianhuachi East Road,Haidian District,Beijing,100038,P.R.C.
Service Hotline:86-010-58880304 E_Mail: zl@showchina.org
Copyright©2006 China Intercontinental Digital Publisher
All rights reserved.Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.