Los Angeles Times

To fight a ‘monster,’ look to a giant

The fearsome alligator gar is deployed to counter the invasive Asian carp

- By Tammy Webber Webber writes for the Associated Press.

CHICAGO — It’s a toothy giant that can grow longer than a horse and heavier than a refrigerat­or, a fearsome-looking prehistori­c fish that plied U.S. waters from the Gulf of Mexico to Illinois until it disappeare­d from many states half a century ago.

Persecuted by anglers and deprived of places to spawn, the alligator gar — with a head that resembles an alligator and two rows of needle-like teeth — survived mainly in Southern states in the tributarie­s of the Mississipp­i River and Gulf of Mexico after being declared extinct in several states farther north. To many, it was a freak, a “trash fish” that threatened sport fish, something to be exterminat­ed.

But the once-reviled predator is now being seen as a valuable fish in its own right, and as a potential weapon against a more threatenin­g intruder: the invasive Asian carp, which have swum almost unchecked toward the Great Lakes, with little more than an electric barrier to keep them at bay.

Efforts are underway to reintroduc­e the alligator gar to the northern part of its former range.

“What else is going to be able to eat those monster carp?” said Allyse Ferrara, an alligator gar expert at Nicholls State University in Louisiana, where the species is relatively common. “We haven’t found any other way to control them.”

Alligator gar, the secondlarg­est U.S. freshwater fish behind the West Coast’s white sturgeon, have shown a taste for Asian carp, which are spreading and outcompeti­ng native fish for food.

The gar dwarf the invading carp, which themselves can grow to 4 feet and 100 pounds. The largest alligator gar caught was 8½ feet and 327 pounds, and they can grow even larger.

Native Americans once used their enamel-like scales as arrow points, and early settlers covered plow blades with their tough skin and scales. But a mistaken belief that they hurt sport fish led to widespread exterminat­ion throughout the last century, when they were shot or blasted with dynamite.

“Some horrible things have been done to this fish,” said Ferrara, adding that sport fisheries are healthier with gar to keep troublesom­e species like carp under control. “It’s similar to how we used to think of wolves; we didn’t understand the role they played in the ecosystem.”

Gar now are being restocked in lakes, rivers and backwaters — sometimes in secret locations — in several states. In May, Illinois lawmakers passed a resolution urging state officials to speed up its program and adopt regulation­s to protect all four gar species native to the state.

But the extent to which gar could control carp now is not well understood, and some people are skeptical.

“I don’t think alligator gar are going to be the silver bullet that is going to control carp, by any stretch of the imaginatio­n,” said Rob Hilsabeck, an Illinois state biologist who says the best hope is that carp will sustain an alligator gar fishery to draw trophy hunters.

Others are more optimistic about the effect once the larger fish is establishe­d, which may require cutting notches in canals to give it access to spawning sites.

Asian carp reproduce more quickly, but alligator gar also grow fast: Those stocked in one Illinois lake six years ago already are more than 4 feet long.

Quinton Phelps, a Missouri state fish ecologist, said the only way to effectivel­y control carp is when they’re smaller, before they can spawn. Which is where alligator gar come in.

“There is potential for them to be a wonderful weapon, but it’s just potential right now,” he said.

One challenge is that huge gar could become a temptation for trophy fishermen, even before they’re old enough to spawn.

“It will be interestin­g to see if fishermen have enough integrity to pass up a 7-foot fish that’s 200 pounds,” said Christophe­r Kennedy, a Missouri fisheries supervisor who’s working on catch regulation­s. “We’d love to create a self-sustaining population that we can turn into a trophy fishery.”

Still, the fish has a public relations problem , including among a boating group in Illinois, whose members recently derided it as a “trash fish” and questioned reintroduc­tion efforts.

But avid angler Olaf Nelson, who in 2013 was the first to catch an alligator gar in Illinois in 50 years — a 2-footer in a stocked lake — said they’re important whether anyone wants to fish for them or not.

“Whether they’re loved or hated, they’re a natural part of the Illinois ecosystem,” he said. “It’s pretty rare that we can fix a mistake.”

‘Some horrible things have been done to this fish. It’s similar to how we used to think of wolves; we didn’t understand the role they played in the ecosystem.’ — Allyse Ferrara, alligator gar expert at Nicholls State University in Louisiana

 ?? Illinois Department of Natural Resources ?? ILLINOIS STATE biologist Nerissa McClelland holds an alligator gar at Powerton Lake. Officials are reintroduc­ing the gar, once reviled as a “trash fish,” to waters in northern reaches where it had become extinct.
Illinois Department of Natural Resources ILLINOIS STATE biologist Nerissa McClelland holds an alligator gar at Powerton Lake. Officials are reintroduc­ing the gar, once reviled as a “trash fish,” to waters in northern reaches where it had become extinct.
 ?? John Flesher Associated Press ?? ASIAN CARP, jolted by an electric current from a research boat, leap from the Illinois River. Some experts are skeptical the bigger fish can control the carp.
John Flesher Associated Press ASIAN CARP, jolted by an electric current from a research boat, leap from the Illinois River. Some experts are skeptical the bigger fish can control the carp.

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