It was already assumed that American eels breed in the Sargasso Sea. But that's a pretty big target[0][1]. The glass eels, or baby eels are really only valuable to eel farmers, you wouldn't eat them.
It's pretty direct: these particular eels appear to swim north along the shore to the outlet of the St. Lawrence River, then more or less straight south to the Sargasso Sea.
Critically endangered species. Market value of up to $2600 a pound in Japan since Fukushima. 50% of American eels and more than 80% of European eels wipped in the last years
Seriously... What where they thinking?.
And what will be next? The efficient rhino poacher's guide and roadmaps?
Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't think you are understanding the issue. These adult eels spend their lives in the rivers of Atlantic Canada. They come down the river once in their lives to breed thousands of miles away in the North Atlantic. The young eels somehow then make their way back to the rivers.
The high prices are for the "glass eels", the juvenile stage. They are caught with nets in the river as they return. This article is about the path taken by the adult eels from the river, to the ocean. Knowing the rough path they take in the ocean is unlikely to help anyone catch more eels.
If you want to catch the eels, you do it in the small river, rather than in the open ocean. Knowing more about their reproduction helps us understand and protect eels. Do you have reason to believe this is not the case?
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[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 30.8 ms ] thread[0] http://sustany.org/local/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Screen-s... [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sargasso_Sea
It's pretty direct: these particular eels appear to swim north along the shore to the outlet of the St. Lawrence River, then more or less straight south to the Sargasso Sea.
Seriously... What where they thinking?. And what will be next? The efficient rhino poacher's guide and roadmaps?
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/american-eel-is-in...
The high prices are for the "glass eels", the juvenile stage. They are caught with nets in the river as they return. This article is about the path taken by the adult eels from the river, to the ocean. Knowing the rough path they take in the ocean is unlikely to help anyone catch more eels.
If you want to catch the eels, you do it in the small river, rather than in the open ocean. Knowing more about their reproduction helps us understand and protect eels. Do you have reason to believe this is not the case?
Here's a parallel story about the European Eels: http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_8273000/827...