A fish on the trail of Genghis Khan

In the world of fish Topmouth gudgeon Pseudorasbora parva, a small cyprinid native to East China, has matched and gone beyond the great Mongol invasion, resulting in the vast range expansion covering much of Asia, Europe and now with a foothold in North Africa. The stealth invasion started in the 1950’s with the end of the Chinese civil war (from around 1840 to 1949) which had restricted human population mobility and trade. At that time, there was an increasing need for developing new sources of animal protein and black carp, grass carp, silver carp and big head carp were rapidly introduced from East China especially from the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River basin to many other places including Yunnan, Qinghai, Gansu and Xinjiang. This species had been cultured traditionally in East China for a long time with specific culturing techniques. These carp introductions for aquaculture have been the beachhead of topmouth gudgeon’s great escape.

Small in size (maximum length circa 9cm), highly fecund with batch spawning and nest guarding behaviour and highly tolerant to environmental changes, topmouth gudgeon has all the attributes of a successful invader. Its first introduction outside of China was in reservoirs and ponds around the black sea as part of a fish farming agreement between China and the former Eastern block. Following long distances and hitchhiking cross country with movements of carp, it rapidly escaped and colonised local waters, dominating communities in ponds and lakes. Recently identified as a healthy carrier of a deadly non-species specific eukaryotic parasite Sphaerothecum destruens, it now poses a threat to European fish diversity.

Preserved material will be compared to material collected from populations established from the first introduction in each country within the non-native range. Topmouth gudgeon has been introduced for several decades to countries with clear contrasting climatic conditions such as Poland, Italy and Algeria. This will provide a unique opportunity to study adaptation under contrasting climatic conditions. Populations will be compared for their life history traits and parasitic communities as well as their population genetic structure within native range but also across introduced range. In addition, live topmouth gudgeon will be brought back from China and various parts of the non-native range to characterise the reaction norms of different populations along thermal gradients. Individual fitness, measured as the number of reproductive events, size of batches and larval growth will be measured for several contrasting populations under a range of controlled thermal challenges. This will allow the evolutionary and phenotypic shift that has occurred during topmouth gudgeon invasion to be measured.

Beyond the immediate scientific interest this expedition represents a cultural and historical journey where an innocent movement of fish from the East coast to the West part of China has rippled all the way to England 50 years later.

The TEAM

ALL ALONG THE EXPEDITION I WILL KEEP THE BLOG ALIVE SO GET IN TOUCH, ASK QUESTIONS AND I WILL BE AS REACTIVE AS POSSIBLE TAKING YOU ALONG THE JOURNEY. :-)

Tuesday 29 June 2010

Day 14


Today we have a day off in Guilin where I am scheduled to give a lecture at three (see the lecture annoncement in red). It has rained a lot and when it stops the heat is on with 100 % humidity. Just before the lecture we went to visit a large cave in the middle of the town, Rob and Bernd bought tourist raincoats! I thought this picture deserved a caption competition so please be creative:-) Rob didn't give me permission to blog his picture...:-( never mind you can still comment and I might be able to convince him!

Thanks for your football after match commentaries but they hardly got a smile from our English man and as a French man living in England I sympathised as I feel that I have lost twice!!

There is always something out of the ordinary in the streets of China. A man transporting fish in aquaria on the back of his moped, or the fisherman who defies the law of gravity by setting his fishing chair on two little planks of wood. This is the beauty of this country, the free spirit despite what we can think from our western view. It is extremely refreshing. Tomorrow we are going to hit the road. I have done some washing but with the humidity nothing dries and it now stinks. The journey in the car will be fun...

1 comment:

  1. Little Red Riding Hood?
    As far as I remember the "Thing from the Swamp" is green ;-)
    And: YES, please: could we have the "after the match foto"? Documentations really should be complete!!

    kind regards
    Irene

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