亚洲无码 earth and environmental sciences professor Martin O鈥機onnell is fishing for clues in Plaquemines Parish to determine whether tilapia鈥攃onsidered an invasive fish species in the wild鈥攈as survived a targeted kill conducted almost 15 years ago.
O鈥機onnell, director of the Nekton Research Laboratory at 亚洲无码鈥檚 Pontchartrain Institute for Environmental Sciences, has received a nearly $50,000 grant from the Barataria-Terrebonne National Estuary Program for the project in Port Sulphur, Louisiana.
O鈥機onnell鈥檚 research involves studying, managing, and conserving aquatic animals in freshwater, estuarine, and marine habitats. His lab researchers examine long-term changes in fish assemblages, responses of aquatic communities to natural and anthropogenic disturbances, and ecological needs of organisms threatened by changing global conditions. Ann Uzee-O'Connell, a researcher in the Pontchartrain Institute for Environmental Sciences, is the co-principal investigator for the grant.
鈥淎s a scientist who has studied invasive species most of my career, I am curious to see how well the eradication strategy carried out by LDWF worked,鈥 O鈥機onnell said. 鈥淚 hope that 14 years after all this happened that we don't find any tilapia.鈥
Tilapia species are probably the worse group of escaped aquaculture species when it comes to causing ecological and economical damage around the world, O鈥機onnell said. When the area ditches were surveyed for tilapia around 2010, it was estimated that they represented 85 percent of the population.
鈥淭his type of quick population growth causes local native fishes to lose both food items and habitat,鈥 O鈥機onnell said.
There are important freshwater species, such as largemouth bass, bluegill and estuarine species like red drum and spotted sea trout that use the areas around Port Sulphur as nursery habitats, O鈥機onnell said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 bad enough that we are losing so much habitat in Plaquemines Parish to coastal erosion,鈥 he said. 鈥淗aving another stressor like non-native fishes just adds to the threat to both commercially and recreationally important native fishes.鈥