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Wildlife experts search for Asian carp in Ohio

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FREMONT, Ohio (MCT) — Sandusky Bay, a watery playground for boaters and anglers, is becoming a battlefield and testing ground in the fight to protect Lake Erie.

On one side: federal and state biologists and agencies including the Ohio and Michigan departments of natural resources, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

On the other: Asian carp, the dreaded invasive species that pose a “very real” threat to the Lake Erie, according to Rich Carter of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.

At stake: a Lake Erie eco­system that generates more than $800 million in sport and commercial fishing.

Wildlife experts fear Asian carp varieties will mushroom in number in Lake Erie and will out-compete native fish for available food. Asian carp, a voracious and prolific species, are a threat to walleye, perch, bass and other Lake Erie fish that feed on plankton.

They don’t just invade, they destroy the food chain from the bottom. They conquer and dominate.

The big issue has been whether the Asian carp might circumvent electrical barriers on a canal 35 miles southwest of Chicago and get into Lake Michigan and spread throughout the Great Lakes.

The fish are also ascending the Ohio River, with some as far east as the Greenup Dam near Portsmouth, Ohio.

Right now, the major weapons in detecting Asian carp in Lake Erie are environmental DNA (eDNA) tests and the work of forensic fish experts.

The eDNA tests detect Asian carp genetic material from such sources as fish scales, fish mucous, fish wastes and even excrement in the water from fish-eating birds, Carter said.

Federal and state agencies are working to assess emerging evidence that bighead and silver carp have reached western Lake Erie. That effort intensified this summer when Asian carp genetic material was confirmed for the first time in Sandusky and Maumee bays, although no live fish were found.

The prevailing thought is that Asian carp are in Sandusky and Maumee bays in small numbers and have not reached young-producing populations.

“Right now, it’s a numbers game,” Carter said of the invasion. “And we think the numbers are small.”

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