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Parks and Tribe Establish Plan to Fight Fish Disease in Lake Superior

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Park and tribal officials have agreed on a plan to fight the spread of a deadly fish virus into Lake Superior fisheries.

The National Park Service and the Grand Portage Band of the Lake Superior Chippewa have agreed to work together on efforts to protect park and tribal fishery resources in Lake Superior from a deadly fish disease known as viral hemorrhagic septicemia, or VHS.

VHS was first detected in the lower Great Lakes in 2003. It does not affect humans.

Though the virus continues to spread to new locations each year, it has not yet been found in Lake Superior. VHS is known to infect at least 28 species of fish within the Lake Superior Basin, including many popular species for both commercial and recreational fishing and has been the cause of large fish kills in other parts of the Great Lakes. It spreads between fish through urine, feces, and reproductive fluids released into the water and through the eating of other infected fish.

Park and tribal fishery biologists believe the virus has significant potential to impact the ecological integrity of fishery resources in Lake Superior fisheries.

The plan developed by the Park Service and the Grand Portage Band identifies six major categories of vectors that could cause the spread of VHS into and within these parks and reservation waters: Aquaculture, untreated ballast water, commercial and subsistence fishing, movement/migration of fish, Park Service and reservation operations, and water-based recreational activities.

The plan also analyzes the likelihood associated with these various vectors and includes recommendations on what must be done to combat each risk. The highest risk vectors include the use of VHS-infected bait by fishermen, the spread of VHS by infected water and/or fish in boats, agency and tribal operations, and untreated ballast water exchange.

Sixteen prevention actions are recommended by the plan, including an aggressive public education and outreach campaign, recommendations to restrict the use of any fish bait that is a potential vector of VHS within park units, requiring that agency and recreational boats and associated equipment be properly decontaminated before launch within Park Service waters, prohibiting the exchange of ballast water within park units, and close collaboration between other federal, state and local agencies and organizations that have broader authority and jurisdiction over VHS related issues.

The plan, which involves Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, Grand Portage National Monument, Isle Royale National Park and Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, was developed by an interagency group of experts.

“The National Park Service has a legal obligation to do everything we can possibly do to keep VHS from impacting the fishery resources in these parks, and we also want to be good citizens in preventing the parks within the Lake Superior Basin from becoming an initial source of VHS infection in the larger Lake Superior watershed,” said National Park Service Midwest Regional Director Ernie Quintana. “However, because these four parks are linked by Lake Superior but located in three states - Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota - all of which have taken slightly different approaches to preventing the spread of VHS, we needed a comprehensive plan to protect the parks, where we have a very high preservation mandate.”

The regional director, while commending the four park units and tribe for working together, added that those groups alone cannot successfully combat VHS.

"This is a complex issue over which we do not have full control or jurisdiction. Preventing this disease from impacting the fishery resources in these parks will require sensitive and sophisticated collaboration between a number of other agencies, the respective states, local boaters and anglers, and the visitors to these parks,” Mr. Quintana said.

“Fish are life,” added Norman Deschampe, Grand Portage Band Tribal chairman. “They sustain us physically and are a part of who we are. Our people have lived along the lake and have fished from the lake forever. We are delighted to work with the National Park Service, or any entity, to prevent VHS from entering Lake Superior. We must all collaborate to keep it from spreading westward into Lake Superior and into other inland lakes.”

The Grand Portage Band is a full partner in the creation of this prevention plan and has joint management responsibilities for Grand Portage National Monument along with the Park Service.

Because VHS is known to emerge and spread fairly rapidly in the early spring, and because the spring shipping and fishing seasons are under way, Mr. Quintana said the groups "will have to move quickly to prevent the spread of the virus this spring. Some parks may have to impose emergency restrictions to require boat decontamination and prohibit the use of potentially infected bait within the park.

"However, we look forward to and appreciate the opportunity to work with all interested stakeholders, including individual anglers, in implementing this plan and protecting local fishery resources from this and other aquatic nuisance species,” he said.

You can find copies of the plan at each of the parks' websites.

Comments

These Great Lakes national parks are some of the hidden gems of the NPS. It's too bad more Traveler readers don't know about them, otherwise I'm sure there would be more comments. Kudos to the NPS for standing up and being leaders to protect these parks, something rare in these times.


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