USGS, R. NELSONThe Cumberland River in western Kentucky has been a grisly scene recently. In just one day last week, a massive fish die-off claimed about 500,000 silver carp, an invasive species native to Asia. Mysteriously, this species alone appears to have been affected in what officials are calling the largest fish kill to hit Asian carp in the U.S.
“Whenever there is one species of fish, you are definitely thinking viral or bacterial,” Paul Rister, a biologist with Kentucky Department of Fish & Wildlife Resources, said in a press release. “It’s not anything water quality wise. If it was oxygen-related or chemical related you would see other species. Primarily what we are seeing below Barkley Dam is all Asian carp.”
Silver carp—known for their spectacular jumping performances—are a menace to many lakes and rivers in the U.S. They crowd out native species and take over ecosystems. Kentucky Fish & Wildlife Fisheries Director Ron Brooks told WKMS that Asian carp die-offs have happened before. “There is a brain pathogen that has been found in Asian carp in previous smaller kills. It is called lactococcosis. Possibly ...