Don鈥檛 throw dead fish, fish parts, or unused bait into the water. Instead, put them in a trash can.
Make sure plants, mud and aquatic life, such as snails and tadpoles, aren鈥檛 getting a free ride. Remove them from your boat, fishing poles, and other equipment.
That鈥檚 a sample of advice from the project to boaters and fishers to help stop the spread of invasive species and diseases.
Invasive species can wreak havoc on aquatic habitats. The most infamous in the U.S. are the zebra mussel and the Asian Carp. Zebra mussels use super sticky threads to latch on to hard surfaces, coating boats, pipes, and other animals. In large numbers, they compete for food with natives. Asian carp, a fish of massive proportions, is taking over parts of the Great Lakes, hurting the local species as well as humans ( up to 10 feet, powerfully knocking into boaters).
Focus on Fish Health, a project of the U.S. Department of Agriculture鈥檚 Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, is especially wary about a new invasive disease in the Great Lakes. Viral hemorrhagic septicemia targets freshwater and marine fish and causes death. The virus jumps to new fish populations when contaminated water or infected fish make their way between bodies of water. It鈥檚 usually humans that make it possible for the disease to spread on a large scale, so that鈥檚 why the project thinks public awareness will go a long way.
Show how you are helping to prevent the spread of invasive species and enter the Focus on Fish Health鈥檚. One of May鈥檚 winners was Abigail Miller who caught 16 bluegills that day with her family. Learning to protect and preserve the environment starts at a young age.
Read more:
: Scientists use electro-magnetic waves to fight the mussel.
Eating the invasive
: Exotic invasive plants in the garden