Native Fishes In The Paper...
#1 Guest_farmertodd_*
Posted 20 September 2007 - 08:27 PM
The bad news was... We found round goby for the first time at Secor Road. Makes for some interesting science though, esp since we're going to remove the dam 100 feet upstream. We'll see how the darters fare. Johnny darter are probably the thing to watch and it's my guess that they'll make it as far as the stream is ripped up, but won't be able to progress once it stabilizes upstream in Wildwood MP. It's been demonstrated in other systems that logperch and blackside darter do okay with them. These are similar, extremely disturbed urban systems as well.
I was, however, hoping she'd point out that the steelhead were exotics too I think that whole conversation went right over her head and she just decided not to talk about it at all. Thank goodness she didn't just put a pic of a round goby in there. Maybe the whole process of dumping them into ethanol grossed her out enough that she didn't want to think about it any more lol.
Todd
#2 Guest_killier_*
Posted 24 September 2007 - 05:34 PM
#3 Guest_ashtonmj_*
Posted 24 September 2007 - 06:56 PM
#4 Guest_farmertodd_*
Posted 24 September 2007 - 07:02 PM
Todd
#5 Guest_NateTessler13_*
Posted 24 September 2007 - 08:44 PM
#6 Guest_farmertodd_*
Posted 24 September 2007 - 09:27 PM
Got a love letter from the IACUC guy though. Apparently the MUO addition to the University Cache is a leeeeetle bit more uptight about doing any "research" on animals. We do the most non-lethal sampling of fishes in the world because we're good with seines and actually think about what we're doing, and this guy has 15 pages of forms for us to fill out for showing a kid and a freshman how fish were caught in PAST research, that none of us did, and that was already signed off on by the Grad School.
God bless academic beauracrats for missing the point, entirely. This kind of crap makes me want to do mussels entirely, since they, like, don't, um, count as "animals". <sigh>
Todd
#7 Guest_NateTessler13_*
Posted 24 September 2007 - 10:03 PM
Got a love letter from the IACUC guy though. Apparently the MUO addition to the University Cache is a leeeeetle bit more uptight about doing any "research" on animals. We do the most non-lethal sampling of fishes in the world because we're good with seines and actually think about what we're doing, and this guy has 15 pages of forms for us to fill out for showing a kid and a freshman how fish were caught in PAST research, that none of us did, and that was already signed off on by the Grad School.
I know the pains of the IACUC all too well. At Bowling Green, the committee meets once a month. So, they only review it at that meeting, any little change they recommend comes back to you, then you resubmit it the next month. Took me 6 months to get a project through and one of the board members helped me put the project together...no thanks.
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