Global Moderator 12poundbass Posted June 23, 2017 Global Moderator Posted June 23, 2017 Saw on the news that an Asian carp was caught 9 miles from the Great Lakes which I guess is past the electric barrier. Yikes! Quote
Super User Darren. Posted June 23, 2017 Super User Posted June 23, 2017 Time to engineer a DNA-specific virus that dissolves the Asian Carp in under 10 seconds with zero harm to the surrounding environment and water species! Commander Data, make it so! Quote
Global Moderator Bluebasser86 Posted June 24, 2017 Global Moderator Posted June 24, 2017 I was thinking I'd heard they'd already sampled Asian carp DNA in one of the Great Lakes? They're nasty fish to have in a body of water. Fun to shoot with a bow, and good cutbait for big catfish, but stinking, slimy, bleeding all over, nasty fish. 1 Quote
Global Moderator 12poundbass Posted June 24, 2017 Author Global Moderator Posted June 24, 2017 7 hours ago, Bluebasser86 said: I was thinking I'd heard they'd already sampled Asian carp DNA in one of the Great Lakes? They're nasty fish to have in a body of water. Fun to shoot with a bow, and good cutbait for big catfish, but stinking, slimy, bleeding all over, nasty fish. They have found DNA in the Great Lakes but no actual fish. They said this is the second time since 2013 an actual fish has been caught past the barrier. Quote
Super User slonezp Posted June 25, 2017 Super User Posted June 25, 2017 I'm an optimist. I don't think they will thrive if they were ever to get into the Great Lakes. The zebra mussels have already done a number on the plankton. Without a viable food source, and lack of current, I don't see them as a threat.....and I hope I'm correct 1 Quote
Super User Scott F Posted June 25, 2017 Super User Posted June 25, 2017 29 minutes ago, slonezp said: I'm an optimist. I don't think they will thrive if they were ever to get into the Great Lakes. The zebra mussels have already done a number on the plankton. Without a viable food source, and lack of current, I don't see them as a threat.....and I hope I'm correct I agree with you except for one point. Back in China, they don't live in rivers, they are lake fish. Because of that, no one thought they would flourish in rivers here. Even here, they were initially raised in ponds before they escaped into our rivers. 1 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.