Chattanooga Times Free Press

State forms commission to halt invasive carp

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NASHVILLE — Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has signed an executive order establishi­ng a commission that will provide advice on mitigating the invasion of Asian carp into the state’s lakes and river systems, according to a news release.

Lee signed the new order last week, and the new Asian Carp Advisory Commission will provide its first report in October.

Asian carp were first imported to the U.S. in the 1960s and ’70s to help clean retention ponds, but they later escaped into the Mississipp­i River system during flooding and have been migrating south ever since. They now threaten to upend aquatic ecosystems, starve out native fish and wipe out endangered mussel and snail population­s along the Mississipp­i River and dozens of tributarie­s.

Silver and bighead carp, two species of Asian carp threatenin­g the Southeast, are capable of eating up to 40% of their body weight each day and are thought to spread through locks, water navigation systems used in rivers and canals.

Nationally, state and federal agencies have spent roughly $607 million to stop them since 2004. Projects in the works are expected to push the price tag to about $1.5 billion over the next decade.

In 2018 in Tennessee, the fish and wildlife commission had directed $500,000 to the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency to aid in efforts to avoid the spread and had committed to providing $250,000 in subsequent years.

In 2019, state officials were optimistic about current evasion efforts, but worried about the possibilit­y of the destructiv­e fish making its way further south in areas they had yet to reach.

In the past, the TWRA and partners have subsidized commercial fishermen to harvest the fish from waterways.

According to the TWRA website, those who locate a small, less than 9 inches, carp anywhere in the state other than the Mississipp­i River, or catch a carp of any size in East

Tennesee or anywhere that the fish is not yet known to be establishe­d are asked to put the animal on ice or freeze it and contact the agency.

Pictures also can be submitted if one is not able to catch the fish.

The TWRA can be reached at ans.twra@tn.gov or by calling regional offices whose phone numbers can be located at www.tn.gov/content/tn/twra.html.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/THE STATE JOURNAL-REGISTER, CHRIS YOUNG ?? Asian silver carp, famous for jumping out of the water when startled, are shown on the Illinois River near its confluence with the Spoon River near Havana, Ill.
AP FILE PHOTO/THE STATE JOURNAL-REGISTER, CHRIS YOUNG Asian silver carp, famous for jumping out of the water when startled, are shown on the Illinois River near its confluence with the Spoon River near Havana, Ill.

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