Michigan DNR to remove illegal carp from lake
The Associated Press July 16, 2012 10:28PM
This June 22, 2012, photo shows a researcher holding an Asian carp pulled from the Illinois River near Havana, Ill. Scientists at a network of field stations on the Mississippi and Illinois rivers are using electric currents to stun fish so they can be scooped up and examined. Researchers have been monitoring fish populations on the rivers for many years and now are looking for evidence that native species are being affected by the arrival of invasive Asian carp. (AP Photo/Robert Ray)
Updated: August 18, 2012 6:35AM
CAMBRIDGE TOWNSHIP, Mich. — The Michigan Department of Natural Resources plans to use electrofishing and nets to remove illegal carp from a southern Michigan lake and study other nearby lakes for the presence of the fish, officials announced Monday,
The removal effort is planned this week at Marrs Lake in Lenawee County, where officials previously said they found a grass carp.
The DNR plans to sample Washington, Wolf and Allen lakes, which are connected, for grass carp DNA to see whether the fish spread.
Grass carp are considered a species of Asian carp although they don’t pose the same risk to the ecosystem.
According to the DNR, they eat important plants and can disrupt fish habitat.
The grass carp was found during a June survey after a fisherman submitted a photo of one at the lake about 20 miles southeast of Jackson.
During the survey, the DNR said, three other grass carp were spotted.
Tissue samples from the grass carp found during the survey were submitted to labs at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Southern Illinois University to determine whether the fish was capable of reproducing, and test results found that was the case, the DNR said.
The DNR’s Fisheries Division is developing a grass carp management plan for Marrs Lake that includes trying to remove grass carp without harming other fish. Area residents are being consulted.
