
July 24, 2007—Biologist Zeb Hogan holds a taimen, a giant member of the salmon family, while searching for "megafishes" in Mongolia.
【世界各地巨型的淡水“怪鱼”】Hogan leads the newly launched Megafishes Project, the first major effort to document, study, and protect the world's largest freshwater fish.
The project aims to better conservation of megafishes—species that grow to at least six feet (two meters) and weigh more than 200 pounds (90 kilograms). They include the mammoth taimen, catfish the size of bears, and half-ton river stingrays.
Hogan, a National Geographic Emerging Explorer. calls the giant fish "the real-life Loch Ness monsters and Bigfoots of the aquatic world." (The Megafishes Project is funded by the National Geographic Society, which operates National Geographic News.)
Many megafish species are endangered due to a variety of threats, including overfishing, pollution, habitat destruction, and dams, which interrupt their migration routes, Hogan said.
The largest migratory fish are usually the first to disappear from an ecosystem, Hogan added.
"Freshwater biodiversity conservation—including protection of animals like trout, catfish, sturgeon—is every bit as important as protection of animals like tigers and whales—perhaps more so," Hogan said.
Hogan's survey will cover 14 lake and river systems on six continents over the next three years.
- 巴菲特的选股标准
- 深夜目击UFO
- 简奥斯汀的爱情语录
- 气候问题成为美澳大选中的重要问题
- 大连男子在路边捡到怀疑是传说中的“太岁”
- 介绍信的格式
- 大型综合巡天望远镜上的世界上最大数码相机已获得首个3200百万像素测试照片
- “军团病”病原体致病能力的分子机制
- 二战时期沉没的德国“卡尔斯鲁厄”号巡洋舰事隔80年出现在挪威海岸
- 离子通道在膜电压作用下被打开的分子机制
