Thursday, 6 December 2018

Tossing dead salmon is good for plants


By Mark Kinver Environment reporter, BBC News

25 November 2018


Never mind silver bells and cockleshells, Mary should have tossed dead fish to help her garden grow.

A team of US researchers has found that sockeye salmon carcasses has helped boost tree growth by up to 20%.

Over a 20-year period, students from the University of Washington tossed dead fish from a stream on to a river bank.

Data shows the nutrients from the rotting flesh boosted growth in the area's trees.

What did the scientists do?

For two decades, students taking part in a long-term study on who/what was eating sockeye salmon in a stream in Alaska have been tossing fish carcasses on to one river bank in order to avoid double counting them during surveys.





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