A new assessment has revealed that 25 percent of freshwater fish are facing the risk of extinction due to climate change and pollution. In Japan, thousands of tons of dead fish, including sardines, have washed ashore, prompting concerns and investigations. The exact cause of the fish die-off remains unknown, with researchers suggesting potential links to migration to colder waters and the release of treated Fukushima radioactive water into the sea. Japanese officials are struggling to determine the reason behind this massive fish die-off.
“Officials in Japan have admitted they are struggling to determine why hundreds of tonnes of fish have washed ashore in recent days.” https://t.co/nyaZKT3tjM
A new assessment has found that 25 percent of freshwater fish are at risk for extinction due to climate change and pollution https://t.co/TiMcZ6OuNQ https://t.co/bYcJeGX8hx
A new assessment has found that 25 percent of freshwater fish are at risk for extinction due to climate change and pollution https://t.co/Mv4RvKcDbB https://t.co/7gERG6w00k
Thousands of dead fish, mostly sardines, mysteriously washed up on a beach in Hokkaido, Japan. The exact cause remains unknown, but researcher Takashi Fujioka suggests migration to colder waters could have potentially caused the fish deaths. https://t.co/2xry5x9KFL
Environmental alarm: massive fish die-off in Japan raises concerns https://t.co/O1bZLGMGyC https://t.co/Lwiwnv4Fnr
Thousands of tons of dead fish wash ashore in Japan - three months after the nation released treated Fukushima radioactive water into the sea https://t.co/ZqFUejoFtH https://t.co/H5Th3f4iCG