The Prague Post - Americans, Canadians unite in battling 'eating machine' carp

EUR -
AED 4.259943
AFN 76.901109
ALL 96.801681
AMD 442.025426
ANG 2.076389
AOA 1063.682196
ARS 1682.614008
AUD 1.774446
AWG 2.090825
AZN 1.972393
BAM 1.957865
BBD 2.336054
BDT 141.728873
BGN 1.955803
BHD 0.437265
BIF 3425.512951
BMD 1.159958
BND 1.505488
BOB 8.014453
BRL 6.213778
BSD 1.159818
BTN 103.58225
BWP 16.59343
BYN 3.962179
BYR 22735.185215
BZD 2.33265
CAD 1.627039
CDF 2551.908735
CHF 0.933506
CLF 0.027421
CLP 1075.722323
CNY 8.212973
CNH 8.206045
COP 4344.775092
CRC 578.207353
CUC 1.159958
CUP 30.738898
CVE 110.381421
CZK 24.164831
DJF 206.147987
DKK 7.469483
DOP 72.656632
DZD 151.193447
EGP 55.234915
ERN 17.399376
ETB 178.990585
FJD 2.636359
FKP 0.877043
GBP 0.875942
GEL 3.134399
GGP 0.877043
GHS 13.019732
GIP 0.877043
GMD 84.677302
GNF 10076.628004
GTQ 8.884371
GYD 242.656981
HKD 9.022725
HNL 30.536207
HRK 7.534046
HTG 151.830138
HUF 381.568194
IDR 19297.416418
ILS 3.788331
IMP 0.877043
INR 103.659975
IQD 1519.402542
IRR 48848.746586
ISK 147.604891
JEP 0.877043
JMD 185.705867
JOD 0.822393
JPY 181.233643
KES 150.568686
KGS 101.438844
KHR 4640.894837
KMF 493.565137
KPW 1043.96136
KRW 1696.358214
KWD 0.356003
KYD 0.966519
KZT 598.688867
LAK 25177.555227
LBP 103875.859767
LKR 357.236784
LRD 205.878031
LSL 19.909199
LTL 3.425055
LVL 0.701647
LYD 6.320667
MAD 10.741329
MDL 19.68276
MGA 5200.485047
MKD 61.546671
MMK 2435.864039
MNT 4133.29528
MOP 9.291099
MRU 46.265797
MUR 53.462957
MVR 17.875237
MWK 2011.221272
MXN 21.277935
MYR 4.78834
MZN 74.116454
NAD 19.909113
NGN 1676.163346
NIO 42.685021
NOK 11.788704
NPR 165.731085
NZD 2.024092
OMR 0.446011
PAB 1.159923
PEN 3.906821
PGK 4.984257
PHP 68.093048
PKR 327.713733
PLN 4.228884
PYG 8093.501477
QAR 4.227158
RON 5.090825
RSD 117.385434
RUB 90.419955
RWF 1686.979288
SAR 4.351513
SBD 9.555009
SCR 15.514438
SDG 697.712423
SEK 10.989092
SGD 1.504072
SHP 0.870269
SLE 26.621033
SLL 24323.746126
SOS 661.69505
SRD 44.663072
STD 24008.797541
STN 24.525762
SVC 10.148704
SYP 12825.544856
SZL 19.902992
THB 37.373757
TJS 10.74608
TMT 4.059855
TND 3.420608
TOP 2.792902
TRY 49.289186
TTD 7.88228
TWD 36.341149
TZS 2856.384552
UAH 48.914891
UGX 4204.416352
USD 1.159958
UYU 46.108632
UZS 13804.559922
VES 282.181034
VND 30594.483553
VUV 142.272494
WST 3.276748
XAF 656.64958
XAG 0.02168
XAU 0.000278
XCD 3.134846
XCG 2.090296
XDR 0.815075
XOF 656.64958
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.476307
ZAR 19.894859
ZMK 10441.021532
ZMW 26.676136
ZWL 373.506141
  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.47

    -0.13%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.64

    +1.03%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    16.2

    -0.25%

  • NGG

    1.4400

    75.51

    +1.91%

  • BCE

    0.1800

    23.2

    +0.78%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    23.39

    -0.13%

  • BTI

    1.1500

    57.81

    +1.99%

  • RYCEF

    0.1900

    13.9

    +1.37%

  • BCC

    0.2900

    75.73

    +0.38%

  • GSK

    0.4700

    48.02

    +0.98%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    72.2

    +1.57%

  • RBGPF

    -1.1800

    76.32

    -1.55%

  • BP

    0.2400

    35.93

    +0.67%

  • AZN

    0.0800

    93.32

    +0.09%

  • VOD

    0.2600

    12.48

    +2.08%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    40.18

    -0.47%

Americans, Canadians unite in battling 'eating machine' carp
Americans, Canadians unite in battling 'eating machine' carp / Photo: Jorge Uzon - AFP

Americans, Canadians unite in battling 'eating machine' carp

Finally, something to unite President Donald Trump, his Democratic opponents and the Canadians he's threatening to annex: a ferociously hungry carp.

Text size:

Invasive carp, sometimes called Asian carp, were introduced in the United States in the 1970s. And they've never stopped spreading -- and eating everything in their path -- since.

"They're eating machines," said Trisiah Tugade, an aquatic biologist with Canada's Invasive Carp Program, as she and her team glided along the Grand River -- a Lake Erie tributary -- looking for fish that specialists fear will devastate the Great Lakes.

Because they can eat up 40 percent of their bodyweight daily, invasive carps were initially seen as a tool to control nuisance algae in confined areas, like aquaculture ponds.

But they escaped, likely during floods, and made their way north, including through the Illinois River. That has raised the specter of the devastating eater establishing itself in the Great Lakes, the world's largest freshwater system by surface area.

"There is nothing that I have seen that scares ecologists more than looking at what the impacts would potentially be if the species of Asian carp that are in the Illinois River get into the Great Lakes and form a breeding population," University of Michigan Great Lakes water policy expert Mike Shriberg told AFP.

It's a threat that has got the attention of Trump, who calls the fish "a threat" and specialists on both sides of the border.

- Shock treatment -

Each year, Canadian experts search for carp in Great Lakes tributaries considered favorable for spawning and feeding -- often grassy areas with warmer, shallow water.

In the Grand River, Tugade and senior biologist Alex Price oversaw an electrofishing mission.

The team lowered two roads into the water that released non-lethal pulsating charges, stunning the fish and allowing them to be brought with nets into a tank onboard.

Fish were identified, measured and -- if not deemed invasive -- released into the muddy water.

Since the program's launch in 2012, only a few dozen invasive carp have been captured in Canadian waters.

James Hall, whose Hall'emin Sport Fishing business takes clients out on Lake Erie, told AFP he was one of the first to catch one.

"I was wondering what it was, but I knew it was something different," he said, describing the moment he pulled a carp out of the water a decade ago.

Hall said he put the fish on ice and called government's carp hotline.

Invasive carp "have been very rare to catch, which is great," said Price, while insisting vigilance was essential given the gravity of the threat.

"They can breed multiple times a year and produce hundreds of thousands of eggs in a single event," he told AFP.

"Within the first year of life, they can be too big for our natural predators to eat," he added.

- Blown apart? -

Shriberg described the Great Lakes as "the great uniters" across US political parties and between Canada and the United States.

Defending them against invasive species has been a bipartisan priority in states on their shores, several of which have historically been US electoral swing states -- like Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin -- he said.

Trump's May White House memo confirming his support for efforts against "the economic and ecological threat of invasive carp," drew cross-party praise.

"We're in the most politically contentious times that I've seen in my lifetime," Shriberg said, calling Trump's "quiet" memo an affirmation of the rare bipartisan nature of Great Lakes policy.

But that path forward is uncertain.

Trump's trade war and annexation threats have strained US-Canada relations. Earlier this year the president reportedly told former prime minister Justin Trudeau that he wanted to revise treaties governing the Great Lakes.

Shriberg noted cooperative management of the waterway has defined US-Canada relations, but said "the Trump administration's hostility towards Canada ... threatens to blow that apart."

If the battle against invasive carp were to fail, the consequences would be both dire and unpredictable, he added.

"It would cause dramatic changes in the ecological balance of the water," Shriberg said.

And if they ever became established in the Great Lakes, "I don't believe that you'd have any chance of actually eliminating the population," he said.

N.Simek--TPP