Usually black spot disease show up on both outside on the skin and in the fillet. When I fillet that pike, there isn't a single black spot on the fillet...clean as white.isnt that black spot disease on those pikes?
Usually black spot disease show up on both outside on the skin and in the fillet. When I fillet that pike, there isn't a single black spot on the fillet...clean as white.isnt that black spot disease on those pikes?
Well common carp can be a huge problem for us. There are programs of common carp removal in Minnesota and we have built carp traps behind the dams/culverts in some lakes.That school of carp looked like a perfect spot for a quarter stick of dynamite. Kaboom. LOL
Really depends on what type of carp, I'm mostly referencing to the asian carp that are becoming a problem.
Well common carp can be a huge problem for us. There are programs of common carp removal in Minnesota and we have built carp traps behind the dams/culverts in some lakes.
They set up the gates behind the dams and when the carps (and other fishes) are swimming upstream through the gates but can't turn around. The commercial fishermen come down and remove the carps and other undesirable roughfish such as buffaloes, bullheads, bowfins, suckers and drums. They let gamefish and protected fishes go.Ive heard of carp traps. How exactly do they work? And does it trap other fish as well? Or just carp?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using MonsterAquariaNetwork App
They set up the gates behind the dams and when the carps (and other fishes) are swimming upstream through the gates but can't turn around. The commercial fishermen come down and remove the carps and other undesirable roughfish such as buffaloes, bullheads, bowfins, suckers and drums. They let gamefish and protected fishes go.