Post
by Anglinarcher » Mon Nov 05, 2012 3:55 pm
The bad news is that they are here to stay. Other then a complete and strong poison that kills off all crayfish and all fish in general, including the springs, inlets, outlets, etc., they are, well, ........ here to stay. That is why we still have carp in the US. The same is true for Millfoil, for Spurge, and for so many other species that are in the US now.
The spread can be slowed, but it is not possible to stop it.
The good news is that almost never is it as bad, in the long run, as we are told. Zebras and Quaga have cleaned up a lot of the great lakes reigion. The water is cleaner then it has been in many many years. Yes, they plug up things and cling on to things (copper or silver plated screens prevent it), and we will need to change how we do things, but for every dark cloud there is a silver lining.
Crayfish/Crawfish that are not native compete with native crayfish, and they will impact the environment. They will eat vegetation, larva, etc. The flip side is that our signal crawfish are not overly prolific so this means that the walleye, bass, and trout will have a lot of new food to enjoy. Perhaps this silver lining is not what we would want of this dark cloud, but it is a silver lining.
It is always sad to see a new invasive, but I personally will try to be optomistic and look for this silver lining. Fish LOVE crawfish. Bass grow faster on Crawfish then they do on Bluegills, Shad, Shinners, etc. Rainbows and Walleye do as well.
Only time will tell for sure.