An interesting read that I thought I'd pass along:
http://www.straight.com/content.cfm?id=18704It came from the pond By martin dunphy
Publish Date: 29-Jun-2006
It squats in the mud and shallow water, its huge, protruding eyes and superb hearing attuned to only one purpose: swallowing whole any living thing it can fit in its gaping mouth. This Gollum of the wetlands is a frog, but not just any frog. It is the American bullfrog, Rana catesbeiana, an introduced species that is many times larger than B.C.’s native frogs and has made itself at home in the Lower Mainland, the Fraser Valley, and southern Vancouver Island. It eats insects, fish, and other amphibians (even its own species), but it will also gobble up turtles, snakes, small mammals, and ducklings. A female can lay floating mats of up to 25,000 eggs that hatch in three to five days.
Within the bullfrog’s general geographic distribution swims its voracious newcomer counterpart. Nicknamed “bucketmouth” by freshwater anglers, the largemouth bass has an eating style that brings to mind a cannibal vacuum cleaner. Anything swimming the surface of slow or still waters is at risk if Micropterus salmoides can wrap its 10-centimetre-wide mouth around it. Underwater, any smaller species of fish is on this apex predator’s menu as well, including other bass.
In Canada, five percent of mammal species and 27 percent of vascular plant species are alien, according to Environment Canada’s Canadian Wildlife Service and the Canadian Wildlife Federation. There are hundreds of introduced or alien species in B.C., most of them plants of different types. Some are referred to as “invasive” species if they move into and dominate new habitats, sometimes displacing other species. Common alien vertebrates that have been around B.C. for so long that most people don’t remember ever not seeing them include grey squirrels, mule deer, mute swans, European starlings, black rats, and house sparrows.
But the bullfrog and largemouth bass present some unique and relatively recent threats. Both were deliberately introduced by humans, and populations of some native species of frogs and salmonids have recently experienced declines. There are no studies that can point to either alien as being even partly responsible for those local declines, but that’s exactly what worries some researchers and biologists: the lack of information. That means there are no studies proving them as not culpable, and both populations appear to be spreading relatively rapidly. As well, the possible effects of global warming on the viability and dispersal of the two heat-loving species locally is unknown.
“IT'S THE UNCERTAINTY,” Scott Hinch says of what bothers him about the largemouth bass’s effect on salmon and trout populations. Hinch is a professor in UBC’s forestry department and has studied adult-salmon-migration biology. While sampling various sites in the Lower Mainland in 2000 and 2001, he found juvenile largemouth, “just a few”, from the mouth of the Fraser River up to Mission. Then he found some in sloughs near Pitt Lake, and some adults were caught in that lake. The bucketmouths next turned up, ominously, in several unconnected ponds and lakes nearby.
“Bass are very good at exploiting their environment,” Hinch says. “They spread so well on their own in connected waters.” He suspects that sport fishers are responsible for the largemouth populations in Pitt’s outlying lakes, but it’s their cohabitation with juvenile salmon, trout, and some endangered species—such as the Salish sucker and the Nooksack dace—in connected waterways that really worries him.
“They’re voracious; they’re highly predatory and they’ll eat all sorts of fish species. You’re toast if you are a small fish and in their vicinity. They can be the same size as a small salmon, two or three kilograms.” As with bullfrogs, largemouths grow much bigger in the southern U.S., with the record weighing in at 10 kilograms and measuring almost 100 centimetres.
Hinch wanted to study the situation because although there is research showing adverse effects on salmonid populations after Micropterus introductions, it is not B.C. research. “I tried to get some [government] money to study the interaction between bass and other species, but I wasn’t successful. These sorts of invading fish species get caught in kind of a [bureaucratic] netherworld.”
The real possibility of warmer temperatures in the future is even more reason to fret, Hinch says. “It’s a worrisome thing with the climate changing. They [largemouths] are adapted well to slower and warmer waters. They are known to compete with and prey upon juvenile trout and salmon, and the warmer the water gets, the better position they will be in.”
The Reel Angler’s Outdoor Magazine Web site (
www.anglingbc.com/reelangler/placesforbass.html/) lists 41 bodies of water in the Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island (including some in the Okanagan Valley and the Kootenays) known to harbour bass. Although it is illegal to stock bass in B.C. waters and a permit is needed to even capture and transport live bass (and it is illegal to use live minnows or other fish as bait in freshwater), the largemouth bass’s range still steadily expands in unconnected waters. The finger of suspicion routinely gets pointed at sport fishers, so much so that the West Coast Bass Anglers group posted a statement on a Web site (anglersatlas.com/) noting that its members “do not encourage non legitimate stockings which are illegal and greatly frowned upon”. The WCBA’s “conservation director”, Shawn Smith, even issued a news release in April 2004 that promised a $1,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of anyone illegally stocking bass in B.C. (Justin Horsman, a WCBA ex–vice president who was with the club for a year after the news release and describes himself as “still in the bass scene, so I’d know”, says on the phone: “As far as I know, there haven’t been any [payments].”)
MIKE PEARSON CAN tell you what a tough customer the bucketmouth is. Pearson is a Vancouver resident who earned his PhD at UBC, studying local endangered fish species. He is now a private consultant and contracts with various levels of government on stream-restoration and endangered-species matters. He has no doubt how the first bass got to B.C a few decades ago—“There’s no way they got here without human help across the Rockies”—and he says it’s a no-brainer that sport fishers are behind some of the recent bass appearances in southern B.C. lakes. “I was at a few meetings with them [bass anglers] a couple of years ago, and it was a kind of ‘nudge-nudge, wink-wink’ thing,” he relates with a laugh.
Pearson notes that the presence of bass on Vancouver Island shows “there had to be human help”, adding: “There are no native members of the bass family in B.C.”
As far as the paucity of information on the effect of largemouths on juvenile salmon stocks, Pearson says: “We all know that there have been major declines in a number of salmon populations. The lack of research is very troubling.”