The Department of Natural Resources will finalize in coming weeks a new action plan to deter invasive carp from further infesting the Mississippi, Minnesota and St. Croix rivers, as well as other Minnesota waters.
Or, considering that the last time the DNR devised an invasive carp "action" plan was in 2014, and nothing much in the intervening years has occurred to deter these fish from swimming upstream from Iowa and other points south, maybe nothing will happen.
Either way, to paraphrase the Terminator, "They're back."
Meaning oversized silver, grass and bighead carp.
And lots of them.
Last week, 323 of these finned interlopers were rounded up in Pool 6 of the Mississippi River, thanks to DNR field staff working in conjunction with contract commercial fishermen and the Wisconsin DNR.
The catch was the largest to date in Minnesota and follows reports by shore anglers and others last June of hordes of silver carp frolicking in midair beneath Lock and Dam 5, which is about halfway between Winona and Lake City, Minn.
Notably, and not a little ironically, about the same time the invaders were captured, a select group of carp experts and other stakeholders from Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin ended a months-long confab about the threat these fish pose to the Upper Mississippi River region.