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About the Asian Carp Regional Coordinating Committee


The multi-agency Asian Carp Rapid Response Workgroup first came together in late 2009 to implement the rapid response plan in light of a positive Asian carp eDNA result within the Chicago Area Waterway System. The Asian Carp Regional Coordinating Committee (ACRCC) was formally established in early 2010 and represents the collective efforts of international, federal, state and municipal agencies to combat the spread of Asian carp into the Great Lakes. The ACRCC provides oversight and coordination of interagency prevention activities through development and implementation of an annual Asian Carp Action Plan and complementary Monitoring and Response Plan.

A group of men and women in waders holding a net filled with captured Asian carp.

Harvesting Asian carp using the Unified Method. Photo by Illinois DNR.

The ACRCC’s objectives are to:

  1. Promote collection of biological information on Asian carp, their impacts, preferred habitats, and biological and ecological requirements.
  2. Identify additional research, technology, and data needed to effectively inform and support Asian carp management strategies.
  3. Support development of technologies and methods that will result in the control and management of Asian carp; and the transferability of these new tools for use in the control of other invasive species, where possible.
  4. Encourage the exchange of information between member agencies and stakeholders, and seek opportunities to transfer and further leverage control technologies developed as part of the Action Plan to other areas of the United States and Canada. Work under this objective by the ACRCC fulfills the coordination and notification requirements of the United States-Canada Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement.
  5. Coordinate implementation and evaluate the effectiveness of collaborative Asian carp assessment, prevention and control measures, as described in the Action Plan.

The work of the ACRCC is supported by the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, as well as partner agency resources. Funding is used to monitor, control and develop new technologies for Asian carp in the Great Lakes basin. As outlined in the Asian Carp Action Plan, the ACRCC works to ensure a sustainable population of Asian carp do not become established in the Great Lakes.

There have been significant developments in the fight to keep Asian carp out of the Great Lakes. As we work together toward an effective long-term solution, we will continue our collaborative and coordinated daily efforts to protect the Great Lakes and Great Lakes communities.

What We Do


Research

Partners of the Asian Carp Regional Coordinating Committee conduct research focusing on detection, monitoring and assessment of Asian carp, and improving control technologies. Research examines:

  • The effectiveness of new trap and net technologies and the integration of netting with other technologies.
  • eDNA calibration and microbial tracking to improve the application of eDNA methodology and characterize eDNA associated with spawning, eDNA persistence, and validation of new marker technology.
  • The use of split-beam hydroacoustics and side scan sonar to characterize fish populations.
  • Traditional fisheries gear and assessments, along with remote sensing technologies, to improve Asian carp harvest.
  • The use of sound pressure wave technology or seismic technology to alter Asian carp behavior.
  • The infusion of CO2 in water as a fish deterrent.

Monitoring and Control Technologies

  • eDNA sampling as an early detection method.
  • Contracting of commercial fishers to harvest Asian carp to reduce populations.
  • Implanting fish with coded transmitters to monitor movements.
  • Collection of hydraulic, water-quality and meteorological data for use in models.
  • Barrier technologies including electrical and physical bypass barriers.
  • Modeling methods, such as FluEgg, which simulate egg transport in rivers.
Minnesota DNR specialists kneeled over a bighead carp as the implant a tracking tag. A U.S. Fish and Wildlife biologist holds a rack of sample collection tubes over the side of a boat to collect eDNA water samples.

Left: Minnesota DNR specialists implant a tag in a bighead carp. Photo courtesy of MN DNR. Right: U.S. Fish and Wildlife biological science technician collects water samples from the Chicago Area Waterway for eDNA testing. Photo by USFWS.