Monday, January 10, 2011

$635,000 awarded to eradicate pike pests

Here's the announcement from the Department of Fish and Game:

Jan. 4, 2011

Alexander Creek pike removal project funded

The Alaska Department of Fish and Game was recently awarded $635,000 from the Alaska Sustainable Salmon Fund for a four-year program to accelerate efforts to remove northern pike from the Alexander Creek drainage in Northern Cook Inlet.

Coupled with funds appropriated by the Legislature last session, this award will allow the department to further the objectives of removing spawning northern pike through intensive gillnetting. A program for enumerating king salmon smolt in the area will also be initiated to help monitor the effectiveness of pike removal.

Northern pike, which are not native to areas south and east of the Alaska Range, have been illegally introduced into a number of river basins where they have had very detrimental impacts on other fisheries resources.

Alexander Creek in the Susitna River basin is one of the most heavily impacted systems. As an extension of ongoing efforts to gauge distribution and relative abundance of pike within this drainage, a concerted effort will now be made to significantly reduce pike numbers.

The overall objective is to restore salmon and resident species populations in this once highly popular fishing destination to long-term sustainable levels that will again provide important sportfishing opportunities.

"We thank the Legislature and the local area partnerships for their support of our efforts to reduce the negative impacts of invasive northern pike," said Charles Swanton, director of the ADF&G Sport Fish Division. "The investments made should be returned many fold in terms of economic and social benefits resulting from successful implementation of this project."

Additional information on ADF&G management plans for aquatic nuisance species and northern pike is available here.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Issue some commercial fishermen licenses and let them get the job done. Make it legal to sell them. Let somebody make money off the removal instead of spending government money.

Seining and traps should be considered where practical also. More selective for the fish you want to save.