This site is being built to make an easy to understand exactly what the National carp Control Plan is actually going to do. For the start of the mendacious trickery this video is pretty damn good.
And two letters from Dr Paula Reynolds below.
So..$15 million is put aside for the Carp eradication plan. $4 million for "research" and the rest on . publicity and "education" What a train wreck VICTORIA is leading a call for more cash for plans to unleash the carp herpes virus, amid a shortfall in the National Carp Control Plan’s research budget. Victorian Agriculture Minister Jaala Pulford has this week written to her federal counterpart David Littleproud, demanding almost $4 million extra be put towards research for the release of the controversial koi herpes virus in Australia’s waterways. It comes as a leading Queensland Government scientist involved in the project, Jonathan Marshall, also called for more research funding — and an extension to the end-of-year deadline for getting the plan ready for the Federal Government’s consideration. “Without more time and more research, an informed decision by the end of this year (on whether or not to use the virus) is just not going to be possible,” Dr Mars...
Final report: Phase 3 of the carp herpesvirus project (CyHV-3) Dr Ken McColl Principal Research Veterinarian CSIRO – Australian Animal Health Laboratory. Link And the gold is below
Parks Victoria is undertaking an urgent European Carp removal program from the Sale Common Nature Conservation Reserve to avoid a potential black water event. In times of natural flooding, Carp enter the wetlands from the La Trobe River and can co-exist with native species when the water levels are high. However, the wetlands are now going through a natural drying phase, so the huge numbers of Carp currently found within the Sale Common are rapidly deoxygenating the water as the water levels recede. Parks Victoria has had to act swiftly to remove up to 30 tonnes of Carp to avoid a ‘mass fish kill’ event, which would ultimately impact on the long-term health of the wetland and native aquatic animals such as platypus, eels, water rats and crustaceans. Parks Victoria has engaged the services of local professional fishermen to catch the Carp alive and will be transported in tanks for research purposes as part of the National Carp Control Plan. Th...
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