
I
recently learned that the Western Governors University is offering the
WGU Excellence in Special Education Scholarships. These scholarships
are designed to help aspiring special education teachers attend college
online What happens when two endangered species of fishes living in
close proximity come into conflict? This is the subject of a study by
Lehigh University researchers Jennifer Gumm, Jennifer Snekser and
Murray Itzkowitz published in the most recent issue of the journal
Biology Letters. The authors studied the Leon Springs pupfish
(Cyprinodon bovinus) and the Pecos gambusia (Gambusia nobilis), both of
which are endangered species found living together in Texas, in an
attempt to understand the interactions between the two species. The
authors first estimated the population size of the pupfish over a
period of seven years by counting territorial males present on the
breeding shelf at the study site; they next studied the interactions
between the pupfish and the gambusia by analyzing photographs of the
breeding males taken in situ.
Gambusia nobilis
The authors found that the number of territorial male pupfish were
declining over the period that they were studied, decreasing their
efficacy at defending against intruding gambusia and consequently
suffer increased egg predation or complete spawning failure.
The authors propose that artificially increasing the breeding ground
area may be one way to solve theis conflict between the two endangered
species.
Male pupfishes “...may disperse and escape interrupted spawnings andegg
predation associated with high concentrations of gambusia.
Cyprinodon bovinus
“Habitat restoration may also increase population size by altering the
expression of phenotypes via further decreasing competition among
males, resulting in more territorial males and increased spawning rates
typically associated with high-quality territories.”