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View Full Version : Another Asian Invasion threatening the Great Lakes



ufcrusher
06-26-2003, 05:45 PM
This was just on NBC news, I will look for a link, but here is the story as told on the news.

If you remember the snakehead fish that was found in the lakes outside of Washington DC, well apparently another "alien" fish has been identified and its actually much more dangerous than the snakehead. The Asian Carp, was originally imported to clean up the mud at the many catfish farms around the Mississippi river.

However, the fish has apparently escaped and is THRIVING in the Mississippi. The fish has a perculiar habit of jumping out of the water when it hears the sound of motor boats and frequently hits the people in the boat. The fish has multiplied and is destroying the ecosystem by eating all of the food that the natives usually eat. So far it has gone as far north as the Illinois river and is less than 15 miles away from the Great lakes. If it gets into the great lakes, it is likely that the entire ecosystem will be destroyed.

They are protecting the lake by use of an electrical field which the fish normally wont cross, however they have already found one in the lake.

Here is one article, but not the thing I saw:
http://www.startribune.com/stories/531/3948843.html

Another article:
http://www.enn.com/news/wire-stories/2002/07/07122002/reu_47840.asp

Apex
06-26-2003, 06:01 PM
Imagine speeding across the lake and getting hit by a 110lb 4 foot long fish. Sheesh.

VNMZ
06-26-2003, 10:03 PM
Maybe I can catch a fish now, yay.

molecularfire
06-27-2003, 06:20 AM
Man... when will people learn not to move animals from one ecosystem to another. You figure they'd wisen up after the cane toad fiasco.

brainsmile
06-27-2003, 08:00 AM
hmmm well I guess the end of the world is near

RichSPK
06-27-2003, 08:11 AM
They just need to train Asian Carps to eat Zebra Mussels.

whitak24
06-27-2003, 06:01 PM
man, the aquatic nuisance species are a huge problem in the great lakes. the major problem is that ocean-going ships are not required to treat their ballast water before releasing it and are exempted from NPDES permits.

typical example of how high-power special interests (in this case the shipping industry) buys exemptions from laws that apply to everyone else and then create major environmental problems.