Biologists
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BIOLOGISTS INVESTIGATE DEAD CATFISH ON CHICKAMAUGA LAKE
After covering 32 miles of shoreline, from the lower part of the reservoir to the dam, biologists found approximately 300 dead channel catfish.
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Trump sending more California water to farms troubled federal biologists.
Federal scientists and regulators repeatedly complained
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California native fish biologists knocked for a loop
To understand the magnitude of that news you have to understand that Independence Lake is the only lake in California – and just one of two lakes in the world – to support a self-sustaining lake population...
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Dry conditions prompted fish biologists to remove daily catch limits on Ore reservoir
When the water level reaches dead storage, large numbers of trout get trapped in isolated pools
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Biologists breed rainbow trout to save disease-ravaged population
But in the 1990s, that fight between fish and fisherman shifted to one between rainbow trout and a parasite that invaded Colorado rivers. It causes whirling disease, an aquatic plague where young fish are deformed, swim in circles and die of starvation.
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Biologists and anglers team-up to bring big bass populations back to the fabled fishery
Little Rock, Arkansas — They’ll pour in by the thousands — tiny largemouth bass, no bigger than a human finger, making their way from plastic sacks to freedom. Altogether, some 100,000 black bass fingerlings will be released into the Arkansas River from anglers competing in the Simmons Bank Big Bass Bonanza, helping the fabled fishery bounce back from what biologists call a dramatic decline in spawning habitat.
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Colorado Biologists Survey Fish in Arkansas River
Temperatures were below freezing and winds were gusting to 40 mph when aquatic biologists from Colorado Parks and Wildlife's Southeast Region set out on the Arkansas River, and in it, to conduct their annual fish survey early Monday, Dec. 4.
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Biologists Wrestle Alligator Weed
Each year, Arkansas Game and Fish biologists spend thousands of dollars trying to control nuisance aquatic plants. One species in particular, the non-native alligatorweed, has commanded the better part of biologists' attention and resources in central Arkansas lakes like Lake Conway for the past 15 years.