fugupuff;1302612; said:
Thanks for the write up and clarification, it was a good read. It's apparent that you have a good understanding of the problem at hand and see the larger picture, please do keep us updated and shed more insight as you see needed here.
I have a question for you, with the Davis delta, which species of concern are they worried about that might affected by the pike population? Squafish, are there any golden trouts?
thanks!
I have some colleagues who work as environmental engineers for Ca Department of Water Resources, and I had previously discussed this issue with Enviro professors at Sac State; however a ton of reliable information on the topic can be found through CA DFG website.
Davis Lake is a reservoir in Plumas county and is a tributary body of water to the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. I dont know the complete list of endangered, threatened or species of concern in the Delta but heres a few:
Sacramento Perch
Sacramento Splittail
Hardhead Minnow Eulachon
Green Sturgeon
The real problem in CA is not the pike, its that a hundred years ago we as a society did not have an understanding of how the things we do effect our environment. Its the destruction of natural habitats and introduction of non-native species that is the problem. The same can be said about nearly all areas of this country.
CA fish and game decided a hundred years ago that the anadromous game fish that were native to CA were not enough for CA anglers and proceeded to stock freshwater piscivores (bass, sunfish, catfish, etc) and followed that by introducing baitfish to grow these gamefish on. I dont think I need to continue on with all the things wrong with that......
The problem with the pike is the bad press they received in CA. Its similar to what happened to sharks after the movie Jaws. The director of the CA DFG contributed to a news article in may of 1997 and went on record calling the pike "the mountain lion of the river" and speculated that the pike could decimate native fish species in the delta.
What was left out of the article was that all CA gamefish could be described in a simialr way, (with 2 exceptions, kokanne salmon and sturgeon). All CA gamefish are voracious predators, and yet they receive no bad press....
I do think that the state did the right thing by trying to rid themselves of the pike before they "tested" the theories about the negative consequences. I think it is better that they try and preserve what we have than to just have the attitude that "one more time wont hurt" However, In my opinion the CA natives would survive the pike just as they have Striped and Largemouth bass, I guess we will see in 10 years when the pike show up in Davis Lake again......