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The administration's initial strategy released last February called for finishing the study in 2012, but the revised date is 2015. Ernest Drott, Asian carp program manager for the Corps, said it would take longer than originally thought to conduct a thorough review that complies with federal law. Even then, he acknowledged it might not produce a plan guaranteed to thwart species invasions. "I'm not sure that technology is available that would 100 percent prevent or stop any invasive species from crossing the boundary," Drott said in a phone conference with reporters. The Natural Resources Defense Council recently proposed "hydrological separation" of the two watersheds by placing dams and pumps in the Chicago waterways. "It can be done relatively quickly with off-the-shelf technology," said Thom Cmar, an attorney with the group. "It's troubling that they continue to rely on more study when it's clear that what's really needed is just the political will to move forward." A major focus in 2011 will be environmental DNA, also known as "eDNA"
-- genetic markers on fish scales and bodily wastes. Over the past years, biologists have reported detecting Asian carp eDNA in numerous spots beyond the electronic barriers, suggesting a full-scale infestation of Lake Michigan may be imminent. The technique was developed by scientists with the University of Notre Dame and The Nature Conservancy.
The administration plans to expand a research laboratory at LaCross, Wis., to allow more eDNA testing across the lakes, and to develop quicker methods of pinpointing carp locations through genetic markers. Mark Biel, chairman of a Chicago business group called UnLock Our Jobs, praised most of the plan but questioned its reliance on eDNA, which his group considers unreliable. "It has not been peer-tested and -- even further -- has been seriously questioned by many in the scientific community," Biel said.
[Associated
Press;
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