Archived Issue January 2012

The release of a single female guppy into the wild can generate entire new populations, even with no males present, according to new research.

Research by biologists at the University of St Andrews (Dr Amy Deacon and Professor Anne Magurran) and The UWI (Professor Indar Ramnarine) on this popular ornamental species, reveals how its ability to keep on reproducing has earned the guppy its reputation as one of the world’s most invasive fish.

The study, published recently in the journal PLoS ONE, reports that the apparently harmless release of guppies into the wild has led to the fish being found in every continent with the exception of Antarctica.

The guppy, whose native home is Trinidad and the north-eastern fringe of South America, is now present in over 70 countries worldwide. Since a single female guppy can establish a viable new population, the research demonstrates that even well-intentioned releases of unwanted pets can contribute to the loss of biological diversity.

St Andrews lead researcher Dr Amy Deacon commented, “Our findings show that the range of the guppy has expanded dramatically since the early 1900s.” ... more>>

Other Top Stories

ACQUISITION
23 years of broadcasts
BBC Caribbean at UWI
NEW CENTRE
Mission to raise the bar
Centre for Competitiveness
RESEARCH
Living with fear
Prof. Gerard Hutchinson
CONVERSATION
A leader remembers
Arthur N.R. Robinson

UWI Calendar February - June 2012

World of Work (WOW) 2012
11 February-23 March, 2012
UWI St. Augustine
The Old Yard
12 February, 2012
DCFA, Agostini Street Compound, St. Augustine
DCFA 25th Anniversary celebrations
1-28 April, 2012
UWI St. Augustine
SALALM LVII Conference
16-19 June, 2012
Hilton Trinidad and Conference Centre, Port of Spain
5th European Conference of Poeciliid Biologists
25-28 June, 2012
Daaga Auditorium, UWI St. Augustine

Also In This Issue

  Single wild female: Scientists discover how a little fish from Trinidad is colonising the world
  From the Principal: Picking Up the Pace
  MSc in Petroleum Engineering Reaccredited by IOM3
  BBC Caribbean archives find a home: UWI gets 23 years of recordings
  Green steam cleaning
  Zangalewa
  Stepping up to the plate: The Caribbean Centre for Competitiveness
  Living in the shadow of fear: The brutal impact of crime on public health
  Lady of the library
  Sharing cheer with students
  Community Health Outreach
  Alumni eligible for 4 million Euro scholarship funding
  CUDA teaching centre a first
  Staff appreciation
  ASDLU marks the International Day of Persons with Disabilities
  UWI to manage 2 million Euro Scholarship Grant
  In the glare of soft light: Tales of a turbulent past through the lens of time