I guess those 24 smakeheads that were caught in 2 days of fishing have little effect on the other species in that body of water in New Jersey. I guess they are feeding on NLS pellets and jumbo carnivore stix. LOL!
They more than likely move into an area that has less native fish like bass ect as they are formidable competition.I guess those 24 smakeheads that were caught in 2 days of fishing have little effect on the other species in that body of water in New Jersey. I guess they are feeding on NLS pellets and jumbo carnivore stix. LOL!
Actually Snakeheads might help take them out!snakehead are not going to devastate the waterways as mentioned earlier
asian carp on the otherhand...
Northern snakeheads can tolerate those areas. You are missing the point though. When the carp spawn, you don't think that snakeheads (and other fish) take out fingerlings? I would bet my house they do, but just not faster than they are producing.i doubt it, asian carp can thrive further north, where 7-9 of 10 fish caught are silver and bighead carp. plus these things get 40 to 100 pounds. please do us a favor and make sure that barrier keeps them out of the great lakes, god knows what will happen once they get in
so is there any specific point this is trying to make? I didnt exactly read anything new about ecologya good read: http://books.google.com/books?hl=en...ge&q=channidae invasive united states&f=false
people need to educate themselves about ecology before they try to have an argument regarding it