Canada has joined the Asian Carp Regional Coordinating Committee (ACRCC), the latest step in the United States’ effort to ensure comprehensive action to protect the Great Lakes from invasive Asian carp.

The federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada and the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources will join other ACRCC partners including the Council on Environmental Quality, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Coast Guard, Great Lakes Fishery Commission, and all eight Great Lakes states in implementing a coordinated Asian carp control strategy.

“With the health of the Great Lakes at stake, we remain focused on seizing every opportunity to build on our comprehensive plan for keeping Asian carp away,” said John Goss, Asian carp director at the Council on Environmental Quality. “Having Canadian experts at the table ensures a bi-national approach to protecting our Great Lakes, and protecting the health and economy of American and Canadian communities.”

“Asian carp are a serious economic, social and environmental threat to Ontario and to all jurisdictions that border the Great Lakes,” said Michael Gravelle, Ontario’s minister of natural resources. “Participation in the ACRCC will significantly complement Ontario’s new Invasive Species Strategic Plan, as well as enforcement efforts, rapid response planning, monitoring and province-wide education to prevent the introduction of Asian carp to Ontario waters.”

The Obama Administration has invested more than $150 million in an effective Asian carp control strategy that includes aggressive tracking and monitoring, strengthening the electric dispersal barriers in the Chicago Area Waterways System, and developing cutting edge biological controls and other new technologies to prevent the spread of Asian carp, among other measures.  In May, the Government of Canada pledged $17.5 million federally to help prevent the introduction and establishment of Asian carp in the Canadian waters of the Great Lakes.

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Photo: US Geological Survey — Florida Integrated Science Center, Gainesville

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