EXTINCT FISH FOUND IN JAPAN!

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The Associated Press has reported that a Japanese salmon species thought to be extinct for 70 years is alive and well in a lake near Mount Fuji.

The black kokanee, or “kunimasu” in Japanese, was thought to have died out in 1940, when a hydroelectric project made its native lake in northern Akita Prefecture more acidic. Before then, 100,000 eggs were reportedly transported to Lake Saiko, but the species was still thought to have died off.

Despite these rumors of extinction, Tetsuji Nakabo — a professor at Kyoto University — claimed his team of researchers found the species in Lake Saiko, about 310 miles south of the native lake. According to Nakabo:

“I was really surprised. This is a very interesting fish — it’s a treasure. We have to protect it and not let it disappear again.”

He posed for pictures and video with a specimen of the FORMERLY EXTINCT fish — that can grow to about a foot in length — bearing dark olive with black spots on its back.

Nakabo said the lake had sufficient kunimasu for the species to survive if the current environment is maintained, though he said in interviews he hoped fishermen would not catch it. Lake Saiko is in a region popular with tourists for its Fuji views and hot spring baths.

The salmon is still listed as extinct in the public records of the Environment Ministry. Yobukaze Naniwa, an official at the ministry, said Nakabo’s claim would be investigated before records are due to be updated in 2012. This is not the first species — including shellfish and plants — that have been discovered in Japan after being declared extinct, Naniwa said.

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