Grass Carp threaten Great Lakes unless something is done soon

Asian Grass Carp
A new report finds that Asian Grass Carps pose a significant ecological threat to the Great Lakes, one that could be extreme over the next 50 years. (Photo by Peter Halasz)

Don Campbell

Asian Grass Carps pose a significant ecological threat to the Great Lakes and that threat could be extreme over the next 50 years. 

This is the major finding of a large binational risk assessment authored by a team of American and Canadian researchers including U of T Scarborough Associate Professor Nick Mandrak.

“We don’t want Grass Carps in the Great Lakes and we need to act now in order to eradicate the population in the Sandusky River,” says Mandrak, referring to the Grass Carp population already spawning in the Sandusky River in Ohio, which is connected to Lake Erie.

Mandrak has conducted risk assessments on silver and big head carp in the past, and also authored the first Canadian risk assessment of Asian carps in 2004 when he worked at Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

He says while not all invasive species have a high ecological impact, Grass Carp are different. For one, they’re voracious eaters, capable of consuming 40 per cent of their body weight per day. As a result, they can grow quite large, up to 30 cm long in their first year of life, meaning they have no natural predators in the Great Lakes. They also produce a lot of eggs, which means even in the short period of time when they can be eaten by larger fish, there are often too many to make a dent in their numbers.

And if you think a cold Canadian climate will deter them, think again. Mandrak has done field research on Grass Carp living in Siberian lakes covered by more than a metre of ice. 

Grass Carp were first introduced to North America from Asia as bio-control agents in the 1960s. They were brought in specifically to control aquatic vegetation like weeds growing in aquaculture ponds mostly used by the Channel Catfish industry. 

“Unfortunately, they escaped from those controlled environments into the wild, either by floods or being released on purpose,” says Mandrak.

Since then they’ve migrated up the Mississippi River into the Great Lakes region where they are reproducing in the Sandusky River. Grass Carps have already been found in Lakes Michigan, Erie and Ontario. 

The concern is that since fish don’t obey borders, there’s nothing preventing them from entering Canadian waters. Once there, Mandrak says Grass Carps could severely decimate wetlands, which are important spawning habitats for native fish. 

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U of T Scarborough Associate Professor Nick Mandrak was one of the authors of a new report citing the ecological risks Asian Grass Carp pose to the Great Lakes. (Photo by Ken Jones)

“We need to be concerned because we share the Great Lakes, and the economic impacts would be significant, especially when you look at commercial fishing and tourism,” he says.  

Mandrak points to the Vaal River in South Africa where 13 of the 14 aquatic species of vegetation were destroyed within two years of Grass Carp being introduced.

He adds we’re at the point early in the invasion curve where Grass Carp populations can be eradicated if rapid response is taken. If not, we could end up with scenarios from the past like Sea Lampreys and zebra mussels, two species that upended the ecology of the Great Lakes.

The study, which was led by Fisheries and Oceans Canada and coordinated by the Great Lakes Fishery Commission, with authors from Fisheries and Oceans Canada, U of T, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, is the first North American-wide effort to look at the threat posed by Grass Carp.

“This study organizes a lot of the information we know about Grass Carps and the risk they pose to the Great Lakes," says Mandrak. "Now we need to figure out what next steps can be taken to manage the problem.”