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Carp
"Harold" wrote in message news:WtDUf.5725$8G2.3873@trndny01... Do you know of any state where common carp caught MUST be kept, and it is illegal to return it unharmed to the water? If you do, please let me know. I don't think killing every carp you see is obeying any game law in any state. General Prohibited Acts It is a violation to: a.. Take, kill, or disturb sea turtles or sea turtle eggs; b.. Take, kill, or disturb any endangered or threatened species (like paddlefish, shovel-nosed sturgeon, and others); c.. Take or kill porpoises, dolphins (mammals), or whales; d.. Fail to immediately remove the intestines from tilapia, grass carp, or any other fish listed as harmful or potentially harmful, except on those waters where a valid Triploid Grass Carp Permit is in effect. In those waters, it is illegal to possess grass carp. Any grass carp caught must be immediately returned to the water unharmed. For a list of waters with a Triploid Grass Carp Permit, please call Texas Parks and Wildlife at 1-800-792-1112 (menu 4) or 1-512-389-4444. e.. Place any game fish into public waters, other than the body of water where the fish was caught, without a valid permit issued by TPWD. This includes fish caught by pole and line. For permit information, please call 1-800-792-1112 (menu 4) or 1-512-389-8037. f.. Take more than 15 live univalve snails during a day which include no more than 2 each of the following snails: lightning whelk, horse conch, Florida fighting conch, pear whelk, banded tulip, or Florida rocksnail. g.. Take or kill shell-bearing mollusks, hermit crabs, starfish, or sea urchins from Nov. 1 through Apr. 30 within the following boundary: the bay and pass sides of South Padre Island from the east end of the north jetty at Brazos Santiago Pass to the west end of West Marisol Drive in the town of South Padre Island, out 1,000 yards from the mean high-tide line, and bounded to the south by the centerline of the Brazos Santiago Pass. http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/publicat...general_rules/ or http://wildlife.state.co.us/NR/rdonl.../0/fishing.pdf 7. PROHIBITED SPECIES: These species and their viable eggs are detrimental to other fish and habitat in Colorado. Unless authorized in writing by DOW for controlled and experimental purposes only, it is illegal to export, import, transport, stock, sell, acquire and possess for release these species: piranha, trahira, gar (all species) snakeheads or murrels, sticklebacks, walking catfish, tilapia, bighead carp, bowfins, silver carp, Indian carp, rudd, zebra mussels, guagga mussels, New Zealand mud snail. or http://www.michigan.gov/documents/un...s_151627_7.pdf It is unlawful to: Possess or transport any live genetically engineered organism or the following nonnative fish: bighead carp, black carp, silver carp, grass carp (white amur), members of the snakehead family, bitterling, Ide, Japanese weatherfish, rudd, tench, eurasian ruffe, tuberose goby, or round goby. To do so may result in a civil fine of up to $10,000. States vary, but the general drift tends toward killing the carp. I don't mind 50 pounds of carp per acre, but 1,000 + pounds an acre is just too much. I see you've switched to "common carp" rather than the broad "carp" you started with. |
Carp
"Harold" wrote in message news:KtEUf.5733$8G2.3248@trndny01... Goldfish and the common carp can interbreed, but produce a weak STERILE hybrid, unlike the goldfish and crucian carp hybrid. The multicolored carp called "Koi" are the common carp bred for ornamental purposes in Japan and consequently are all known by Japanese names. They are, like the wild common carp, a strong fish and considered hardier than goldfish. Multi color carp are not uncommon. Bright vivid red and black and/or white blotches make each unique. Whether the result of hybridization, or a natural consequence of recessive genetics is debatable. I have seen this multi-color appearance many times. It eventually becomes rare where it was once common. All these fish were fully scaled. I've not seen a multi mirror carp, but we pulled what appeared to be an albino carp many years ago. (it may have merely been totally white.) |
Carp
"Pepperoni" wrote in message ... "Harold" wrote in message news:KtEUf.5733$8G2.3248@trndny01... Goldfish and the common carp can interbreed, but produce a weak STERILE hybrid, unlike the goldfish and crucian carp hybrid. The multicolored carp called "Koi" are the common carp bred for ornamental purposes in Japan and consequently are all known by Japanese names. They are, like the wild common carp, a strong fish and considered hardier than goldfish. Multi color carp are not uncommon. Bright vivid red and black and/or white blotches make each unique. Whether the result of hybridization, or a natural consequence of recessive genetics is debatable. I have seen this multi-color appearance many times. It eventually becomes rare where it was once common. All these fish were fully scaled. I've not seen a multi mirror carp, but we pulled what appeared to be an albino carp many years ago. (it may have merely been totally white.) Yes, I've occasionally seen such 2 or 3 toned common carp (the garden pool koi) in fishing waters as well. Combinations of white, black and red for the most part. But I've always assumed they were the result of someone "getting rid" of their pond fish in the nearest lake. And like feral pigs they do well back in the wild. Whatever natural disadvantage they have by being bright colored, I guess they make up for by getting simply enormous. My personal biggest unintentional carp...18 pound mirror carp...tailhooked. |
Carp
"Pepperoni" wrote in message ... "Harold" wrote in message news:WtDUf.5725$8G2.3873@trndny01... Do you know of any state where common carp caught MUST be kept, and it is illegal to return it unharmed to the water? If you do, please let me know. I don't think killing every carp you see is obeying any game law in any state. General Prohibited Acts It is a violation to: a.. Take, kill, or disturb sea turtles or sea turtle eggs; b.. Take, kill, or disturb any endangered or threatened species (like paddlefish, shovel-nosed sturgeon, and others); c.. Take or kill porpoises, dolphins (mammals), or whales; d.. Fail to immediately remove the intestines from tilapia, grass carp, or any other fish listed as harmful or potentially harmful, Do you have a list of harmful or potentially harmful fish as defined by the Texas Parks and Wildlife? And if som is the "common Carp" on that list? except on those waters where a valid Triploid Grass Carp Permit is in effect. In those waters, it is illegal to possess grass carp. Any grass carp caught must be immediately returned to the water unharmed. For a list of waters with a Triploid Grass Carp Permit, please call Texas Parks and Wildlife at 1-800-792-1112 (menu 4) or 1-512-389-4444. e.. Place any game fish into public waters, other than the body of water where the fish was caught, without a valid permit issued by TPWD. This includes fish caught by pole and line. For permit information, please call 1-800-792-1112 (menu 4) or 1-512-389-8037. f.. Take more than 15 live univalve snails during a day which include no more than 2 each of the following snails: lightning whelk, horse conch, Florida fighting conch, pear whelk, banded tulip, or Florida rocksnail. g.. Take or kill shell-bearing mollusks, hermit crabs, starfish, or sea urchins from Nov. 1 through Apr. 30 within the following boundary: the bay and pass sides of South Padre Island from the east end of the north jetty at Brazos Santiago Pass to the west end of West Marisol Drive in the town of South Padre Island, out 1,000 yards from the mean high-tide line, and bounded to the south by the centerline of the Brazos Santiago Pass. http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/publicat...general_rules/ or http://wildlife.state.co.us/NR/rdonl.../0/fishing.pdf 7. PROHIBITED SPECIES: These species and their viable eggs are detrimental to other fish and habitat in Colorado. Unless authorized in writing by DOW for controlled and experimental purposes only, it is illegal to export, import, transport, stock, sell, acquire and possess for release these species: piranha, trahira, gar (all species) snakeheads or murrels, sticklebacks, walking catfish, tilapia, bighead carp, bowfins, silver carp, Indian carp, rudd, zebra mussels, guagga mussels, New Zealand mud snail. The common carp is not on the above list. Silver carp and Bighead carp are not the "common carp" we all know. or http://www.michigan.gov/documents/un...s_151627_7.pdf It is unlawful to: Possess or transport any live genetically engineered organism or the following nonnative fish: bighead carp, black carp, silver carp, grass carp (white amur), members of the snakehead family, bitterling, Ide, Japanese weatherfish, rudd, tench, eurasian ruffe, tuberose goby, or round goby. To do so may result in a civil fine of up to $10,000. Again, the common carp is not on the above list. But thanks for your post. I'll remember not to release any New Zealand mud snails next time I'm fishing. States vary, but the general drift tends toward killing the carp. I don't mind 50 pounds of carp per acre, but 1,000 + pounds an acre is just too much. I see you've switched to "common carp" rather than the broad "carp" you started with. Hate to break it to ya, but nothing you posted above makes any reference to the common carp. I haven't merely "switched" to common carp...I have clarified this discussion because so many people have been confused by the rather idiotic naming of 4 non-native fish that are "members of the carp family" as "carp". Since you still seem unclear on this point, I'll be happy to explain again. The common carp was deliberately introduced into the US in the 1800s. This is the brown fat fish with the two barbels, the sucker-like mouth, that digs up the mud, destroys habitat and reproduces at an alarming rate. "Common carp" is the CORRECT NAME for this fish which Rodney considers vermin, and a great many of us consider to be over abundant and destructive to the native species and habitat. If you don't believe me, take a look. http://www.fcps.k12.va.us/StratfordL...ommon_carp.htm The Grass Carp (White Amur) was also deliberately introduced and bercause it feeds solely on algae and aquatic plants it is used by many states to get rid of excess vegetation. http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/huntwild...species/gcarp/ The Black Carp (Snail carp, Chinese Roach)was introduced by mistake. They look more like big chubs than the common carp. http://el.erdc.usace.army.mil/ansrp/.../mpfig%203.jpg The Bighead carp and Silver Carp are really nothing like carp. They don't feed on everything they find on tghe bottom like the common carp does. Rather, they are a pelagic fish swimming near the surface and feeding on plankton. These two got into our river systems by accident. http://www.fws.gov/midwest/LaCrosseF...rp_silver.html http://www.bowfishiowa.com/Muzzy_37lb_Bighead.jpg The last two species poses a potential threat, whereas the common carp has been in this country long enough that we know pretty damn well what it does. |
Carp
Okay, this is my take on carp. Actually, not my take, I've read this
stuff over the years, so it may or may not be true. Carp were introduced from Europe to replace depleted food species like the sturgeon. Apparently carp were highly thought of as a food species in Europe. This was done with the full knowledge and blessing of our federal government, a long time ago. Before the introduction of the European Carp, bass were so numerous that they were actually commercially fished in the Canal feeder reservoirs, Buckeye, Indian and Grand Lake Saint Marys, in Ohio. Bass were also commecially fished in the Western Basin of Lake Erie. Anyway, the above, about commercial fishing, is an almost direct quote. I've fished one of the old Ohio reservoirs, Buckeye, for years. I have watched carp spawn. They spawn at the same time and in the same spots favored by Largemouth bass. Their spawning habits includes rolling violently around vegetated shoreline areas. This has got to be destructive to bass nests. You can witness this behaviour every year at Buckeye lake. I would like to see these failed food fish removed from our waters. They don't belong here even though they might be fun to catch. It is my undestanding that Buffalo fish are good tasting as is the Sheepshead. I have never eaten a Buffalo fish but I have eaten Sheepshead and they're pretty tasty. That's my take, IMHO, YMMV. :) Buck |
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