K
We fucked it up in the first place though...dont fuck with mother nature
When will the government learn this?
..... Me no get it senor.Thats the most retarded thing i have ever read. Animals eat each other that's how it works right? The government is probably going to poison us next so we cannot retaliate against them.
Well then bring on the poison!the trout are NONNATIVE.
they must die.
Sounds like an INS/homeland security problemthe trout are NONNATIVE.
they must die.
The best and the brightest work for the park service? Oh that makes me feel betterYes it makes total sense. They are performing a very calculated ecological service to that biome. For whatever reasons their is an abundance of non-native fish that fucks with the frog population in that area (frogs are picky breeder and can die off in a generation or two). So they are using a poison that targets that non-native fish to kill it off and restoring the that particular ecosystem. This is done all the time. Trust me, this is a very calculated idea and I'm sure the national park service has the best people performing this ecological service. Most of the scientist that do this type of work are real hippy liberal types. The last thing they'd want to see is a destroyed ecosystem.
I never said they work for the park service. Usually it's scientist who are contracted out and do the work independently. My bio teacher is a marine biologist and does plenty of work around the country for various government agencies. Most of the time multiple scientific teams work independently from each other and provide solution to these problems. Trust me very bright people handle these type of situations. It's not like they're going to drop random chemicals to kill everything in the water. Ecological restoration like on this type of scale is only done when no other solutions work. Basically it's the last resort before these non-native fish do far worse things to that biome.The best and the brightest work for the park service? Oh that makes me feel better
I never said they work for the park service. Usually it's scientist who are contracted out and do the work independently. My bio teacher is a marine biologist and does plenty of work around the country for various government agencies. Most of the time multiple scientific teams work independently from each other and provide solution to these problems. Trust me very bright people handle these type of situations. It's not like they're going to drop random chemicals to kill everything in the water. Ecological restoration like on this type of scale is only done when no other solutions work. Basically it's the last resort before these non-native fish do far worse things to that biome.