Weed eating carp not a good idea except in fewer numbers than recommended
There is a lake near me I've fished for over 40 years and learned pretty much everything I know about catching different fish species. The habitat was perfect for bass, pickerel, panfish and catfish. It had just the right amount of pads and other weeds that supported the spawns of different species and fingerling survival. But our previous club president listened to non-angler property owners complaining about weeds around their docks and had the NYSDEC give a permit for triploid weed eating grass carp - 5,000 in fact! Fortunately - or unfortunately - the prez and homeowners association without much discussion or research funded only 3700 carp.
Quote:
One needs to know what types of plants these fish eat, what they don’t, and then stock the right size fish at the proper rates. Rather than shooting from the hip. If stocked at a high enough density early in the year before plants germinate, grass carp will consume all vegetation within their selective diet. This can be a negative because bare ponds leave young of the year (YOY) and juvenile fish with little refuge. As a result, eradicating vegetation can cause a balanced fishery to quickly turn upside down, especially systems that are not very nutritionally productive via plankton.
Besides that, certain plants carp don't eat spread in shallow water changing locations that used to be productive for anglers to inaccessible areas.
The lake I mentioned now has massive fields of lily pads never seen in all the years I've fished the lake. A pad not native to the lake measures 1.5' in diameter, the thick growth allowing no access to shorelines.
The change is permanent and will get worse as time goes on. Sad that such a great fishery has gone down the tubes including the numbers of fish once caught of the different species.