A new study has found that the Mekong River’s largest freshwater fish are shrinking in size, with critically endangered species like the giant catfish and giant barb now averaging less than half their historical size.
Overfishing, habitat loss, dam construction, sand mining, pollution and climate change are driving the decline.
Scientists warn the trend mirrors global declines in large freshwater species.
by Anton L. Delgado
#news #fishing #endangeredspecies

Conservation news
Shrinking Mekong megafish underlines risks to the river, study finds
The megafish of the Mekong River are shrinking, a new study has found. In the most comprehensive analysis of species size in Southeast Asia’s Low...

