RE: NANFA-- Escalating the War Against Predator Pike

Crail, Todd (tcrail_at_northshores.com)
Mon, 11 Feb 2002 12:35:29 -0500

Interesting read Jay, thanks for passing it along. I'm not really sure
who to villianize in this particular scenario, but for sure, the clear
loser more than likely will turn up the salmon... again. Do you have
any other background on this saga (like what native fisheries / habitats
they hosed by slapping in their little wall o' concrete), what other
niches they filled with more arbitrarily "desireable" species like
striper and walleye in addition to the hatchery trout (appears it's
'okay' that they imported some Centrarchids ;), etc?

I did a bit of diggin myself.. Maybe others are interested in knowing a
bit more, maybe I'm just on the downside of the curve. I've been away
for a bit ;)

The Lake Davis Pike site:
http://www.dfg.ca.gov/northernpike/
Abstract on control:
http://www.fisheries.org/rotenone/rewards/05lee.pdf
Local Response:
http://www.sacbee.com/content/news/story/1579399p-1655685c.html

Todd

-----Original Message-----
From: Jay DeLong
Sent: Monday, February 11, 2002 11:27 AM
To: NANFA
Subject: NANFA-- Escalating the War Against Predator Pike

February 4, 2002
LA Times

Escalating the War Against Predator Pike
Environment: State wildlife agency plans to use detonator cord in Lake
Davis to kill the fierce fish that dines on prized trout. Critics say
the
effort is doomed.

By BETTINA BOXALL, TIMES STAFF WRITER

They have been poisoned, stunned and scooped into nets. Soon, they may
be
blown up.

This spring, the state plans to launch a new line of attack on the
thus-far-indomitable northern pike of Lake Davis. The Department of Fish
and
Game intends to explode detonation cord in pockets of the Plumas County
reservoir to kill the unwanted pike, which prey on the lake's trout.

The process will not, the department says, be like setting off land
mines.
Rather, the small explosions will send pressure waves into the water,
bursting the air bladders of any nearby fish. They will die, but most
will
stay relatively intact. The planned assault is the latest strategy in
state
attempts to control the northern pike, a big, hungry fish that
mysteriously
made its way into the lake in the early 1990s and refused to leave.

The state dumped chemical poison into Lake Davis in 1997, wiping out its
fish population. But some pike survived. They have since rapidly
reproduced,
and last summer, more than 6,300 pike were taken from the lake by fish
and
game personnel.

For now, the fish and game department seems to have given up hope of
ridding
Lake Davis of the pike. The goal instead is to control their numbers so
they
don't destroy the lake's prized trout fishery or spread downstream,
where
they could wreak havoc on valuable salmon fisheries.

Detonation cords have been used before in California to kill fish
threatening salmon in the Eel River system on the North Coast, said fish
and
game senior biologist Ivan Paulsen. They have never been used in Lake
Davis,
which in the past has functioned as a drinking water source for local
communities.

A recently released environmental report, now under public review,
concluded
that detonation would have no significant impact on the lake. Paulsen
said
experiments conducted for the study indicated that the detonations would
leave some trace chemicals in the lake, but in quantities so minute they
would be undetectable.

The detonations would kill any nearby fish and amphibians, including the
lake's trout. Trout would be restocked, and some of the dead trout would
be
left onshore as food for bald eagles that nest nearby.

Fran Roudebush, chairwoman of the Lake Davis Steering Committee, said
that
once locals understand that the state is not going to blow up the lake,
they
are not objecting to the plan. A public hearing on the matter will be
held
Tuesday in Portola.

More controversial, she said, is talk about draining the lake to get rid
of
the pike. Fish and game officials have placed that option at the bottom
of
their list.

But Plumas County supervisors have expressed an interest in having the
state
drain the reservoir and store the water downstream, so the county could
sell
it and use the revenue to offset losses in tourism and sport fishing
that
the region would suffer until the lake refills. That would include
buying
any homes people wanted to sell when the lake was dry.

The supervisors have contacted the state about the proposal but have not
received a response, said county Supervisor B.J. Pearson.

Residents have no particular objection to the detonation plan, he added.
But, "at best, it's going to kill a few pike. It's not going to solve
the
problem."

Biologist Paulsen said the detonations should kill pike quite
efficiently. A
one-acre test detonation will be conducted in the reservoir in April.
Water
quality will be sampled as well as the intensity of the shock waves.

If all goes well, the state would use detonation cord in areas of up to
10
acres where pike are concentrated. In 2003 and 2004, areas of up to 20
acres
would be treated.

Resembling clothesline, the cord would be run in lengths back and forth
through the water. Any fish within 21 feet of a detonation would be
killed.

------
The article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/la-000008839feb04.story

Visit Latimes.com at http://www.latimes.com

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