Missouri
Related: About this forumMissouri Scientists Fight To Save A Fish With Teeth Like An Alligator
On a hot morning in Cape Girardeau, two men pulled up nets from a lake in hopes of catching alligator gar, one of the largest and most feared fish species in North America.
Theyre scientists with the Missouri Department of Conservation, which has spent 12 years trying to restore the alligator gars dwindling population in the state. Its numbers in Missouri have fallen partly because the state doesnt have strong regulations to prevent overfishing of the species.
Man-made structures like levees and dams have also separated the Mississippi River from the floodplain. They block the alligator gar from reaching critical habitat, said Solomon David, an aquatic ecologist at Nicholls State University in Louisiana.
We've really altered sort of the natural patterns of how some of these large river systems work and therefore prevent some of these species from accessing spawning grounds that they need in order to reproduce, David said.
https://news.stlpublicradio.org/post/missouri-scientists-fight-save-fish-teeth-alligator
SWBTATTReg
(24,628 posts)also has had a negative impact...the gars I've seen were in the Niangua River basin (near Bennett Spring) and was really something to see.
democratisphere
(17,235 posts)nocoincidences
(2,364 posts)They're in the lakes the rivers and even the streams, which is scary as hell.
TomSlick
(12,075 posts)Maybe we could send a few.