Wednesday, June 30 , 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 3 CARP From Page 2 Bighead and Silver Asian carp eat plankton, a primary food source for indigenous fish in the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers, and easily out-compete those native species. The ACRCC reported that commer- cial catch of Bighead Asian carp in the Mississippi River shot from 5.5 tons to 55 tons between 1994 and 1997, and today fishermen catch up to 25,000 pounds of Bighead and Silver Asian carp in the Illinois River on a daily basis. The report added that the com- mercial value of the carp is much lower than that of the fish they out-compete, posing severe consequences for the $7 billion commercial, tribal and sport fishing industries in the Great Lakes. The ACRCC also warned that Silver Asian carp, which can grow to over 20 pounds, are a direct threat to people because they are easily startled by boat motors and when around one, leap as high as ten feet out of the water. Boat- ers and jet skiers in Asian carp-inhab- ited waters are regularly hit by flying fish, according the ACRCC. Joel Brammeier, president and CEO of Alliance for the Great Lakes - a group that fights for thepreservationof the Great Lakes through public policy, *education and local efforts - said the only way to avoid an Asian carp inva- sion is to construct a physical barrier, known as "hydrological separation." "It's disturbing to find a live fish, but the reality is the same," he said. "We need to separate the Great Lakes from the Mississippi River. The only solu- tion that's going to eliminate the con- cern of invasions of the Great Lakes by Asian carp or other species is separat- ing these two water systems." According to Brammeier, the United States Army Corps of Engineers has orders to look into construction of a permanent barrier, but it hasn't acted swiftly enough and needs to "get on the ball and finish the work that it's been charged to do." Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) issued a press release last Friday announcing that he and Senator Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) will introduce legislation this week that will require the USACE to speed up investigation into hydro- logical separation. Senator Stabenow, who has sought to keep Asian Carp out of the Great Lakes for years, took to the Senate floor last weekto urgethe U.S. Army Corp of Engineers to close the locks connect- ing the Illinois River to Lake Michigan until a more permanent solution like hydrological separation is put in place. "This isn't just the economy, it's not just boating, it's not just fishing, it real- ly is our way of life in the Great Lakes, and despite efforts that have gone on for years to stop the fish, it hasn't happened, and now we have to take very decisive action to close the locks immediately so that we can determine how best long-term to solve this prob- lem," Stabenow said at the time. "Asian carp could completely unwind the food chain with devastat- ing effects for our existing fish popu- lations," Stabenow said, which, she added, would put the $16 billion recre- ational boating industry and $7 billion dollar fishing industry at risk. Mark Denzler, vice president and chief operating officer of the Illinois Manufacturers Association, voiced strong opposition to the proposal to close the locks, saying cutting off the waterway would have severe conse- quences. "Closing offthe Great Lakes fromthe Chicago waterways would be economi- cally devastating," he said. "It would create an economic ripple, not only in Chicago, but also in the Midwest." The IMA is a member of Un-Lock Our Jobs, a coalition that fights for keeping Asian carp out of the Great Lakes without closingthe locks. Denzler said the waterway is essen- tial for transportation of resources like grain, coal, petroleum and road salt, and closing the waterway would cost tens of thousands of jobs. According to the Un-Lock Our Jobs website, $29 billion worth of materials pass through the waterway each year, and a DePaul University study estimat- ed that closing the locks would cost the Chicago area alone over $582 million in the first year. Denzler emphasized that closing the waterway would also be environ- mentally damaging. Without a water- way, he said, materials would have to be transported by semi trucks, which get around 59 miles to the gallon, as opposed to barges, which average around 514 miles per gallon. "From an environmental stand- point, every barge that's used is equiv- alent to about 80 semi trucks," he said. "That's about 6,000 semi trucks of materials in a week ... that's a convoy that would go from Chicago allithe way to Milwaukee." Denzler said the members of Un- Lock Our Jobs care about the environ- ment and appreciate the severity of an Asian carp invasion just as much as anyone else but believe that there are other ways to defend the Great Lakes. He said he didn't think the electric barrier was enough to deter the Asian carp, but additional defenses like bub- ble barriers, toxins and fish reproduc- tion control could solve the problem without having to close the locks. Denzler said that the political response to last week's catch was a "knee-jerk reaction" and that it's still unclear how the fish even arrived in Lake Calumet in the first place. It could have swum up the river, he said, but it also could have been accidentally dumped there by someone. In a June 3 report from the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers, Colonel Vin- cent Quarles was quoted as saying that closing the locks would not be an effec- tive method of keeping Asian carp out of the Great Lakes. "Our analysis incorporated infor- mation gathered from USFWS and other Asian carp experts. In the end the analysis showed that using mea- ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES/AP A 20-pound Asian carp is held after being caught beyond the electric barriers. sures such as temporary lock closures will do very little to reduce the risk of Asian carp migration," Quarles said. Brammeier said that the concerns from members of Un-Lock Our Jobs don't apply to the hydrological separa- tion that Alliance for the Great Lakes advocates for because the permanent barrier would be in a different location that would not interfere with signifi- cant resource transportation. "Those locks were built to move resentatives of Congress, urging the administration to act immediately in the interest of protecting the lakes. Brammeier said that whatever effective temporary solutions that can be done should be done, but ultimately federal officials need to work harder for a long-term solution. "What we're learning is these fish move fast, and for us to have any shot at protecting the lakes is, we have to move faster," he said. water, not to stop fish, and their loca- tions were chosen for that purpose. Frankly, the locks don't tell us much if anything about where a permanent separation should take place, so any * 1 argument about what closing locks would do isn't relevant," Brammeier said. Last Friday, a group of senators from the Great Lakes region, including Sta- benow, Durbin and Senator Carl Levin (D-Mich.), sent a letter to President Barack Obama asking for the imme- diate appointment of a Coordinated Response Commander who would oversee the day-to-day efforts of fed- eral, state and local agencies in keeping Asian carp out of the Great Lakes. 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