Agencies Test Aquatic Invasive Species Readiness – Video Bog
|
|
More than 30 representatives of local, state and federal agencies and community groups boarded boats and headed for Erie's Presque Isle Bay this week to measure their response capabilities should an aquatic, non-native species invade the Great Lakes. More than 180 non-native aquatic species have been documented in the According to Lori Boughton, head of the Department of Environmental Protection's Office of the "These organisms prey on or directly compete with our native species for the same limited resources, threatening The on-the-water exercise is part of a three-day mock aquatic invasive species response exercise developed by the Great Lakes Regional Collaboration, sponsored by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and hosted by DEP. A table top exercise preceded the on-the-water session to help familiarize participants with the roles and responsibilities of each agency or organization in a real-life response. "The During on-the-water exercise in Harmful aquatic invasive species are introduced and spread through a variety of means; one of the most prevalent pathways is the unintentional spread by boaters and anglers. "Water recreationalists and sportsmen who visit an infested waterway may unknowingly pick up an uninvited aquatic hitchhiker and deliver it straight to the bay," said Boughton. "Recreational boaters and anglers can play an enormous role in preventing the spread of aquatic invasive species by cleaning, draining and drying their boats each time they leave a body of water." For more information on invasive species in Video Blog: Group Plans to Fight Non-Native Species |
|
8/1/2008 |
|
Go To Preceding Article Go To Next Article |