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USGS scientist takes aim at Great Lakes invaders

Rising Higher: A Research Lab Built from the Ground Up - Part 2

Great Lakes Researchers Go Down Under

Rising Higher: A Research Lab Built from the Ground Up - Part 1

Meet the Fleet: GLFC-USGS Partnership Makes Waves with Newly Renovated Deepwater Science Vessel Fleet

A Monograph on Ciscoes of the Laurentian Great Lakes and Lake Nipigon

WATCH: Acoustic Telemetry Provides In-Depth Look into Fish Behavior

Eel-Ladder Style Traps: A New Lamprey Control Tool

A Lampricide Treatment: Up-Close

Lamprey Nativeness Claims Annulled by Commission's Eshenroder

A Population at the Edge: American Eel Declining at the Extremes

Celebrating 60 Years of Successful Sea Lamprey Control, Science, and Cross-Border Collaboration!

Great Lakes Fishery Commission Hosts Workshop to Explore Lampricide Resistance and the Development of Next Generation Lampricides

Great Lakes Scientists Use Acoustic Telemetry to Reveal the Secret Lives of Fish

Taking Lampreys on the Road!

Hammond Bay Biological Station: The Nexus for Research and Restoration on the Great Lakes

Big Consequences of Small Invaders

It's Getting Hot in Here!

New Sea Lamprey Estimates Suggest a Dramatically Decreased Population

Conducting Research through Cooperative Partnerships: The PERM Agreement

Living on the Edge: A Closer Look at Coastal Communities

Asian Carp: The War Isn't Over

Managing the Lake Huron Fishery

American Eels in Peril

Understanding Sea Lamprey: Mapping the Genome and Identifying Pheromones

USGS scientist takes aim at Great Lakes invaders

USGS scientist takes aim at Great Lakes invaders

Nick Schloesser, a recent University of Wisconsin-La Crosse graduate who is also a U.S. Geological Survey biologist, is adding to the body of knowledge to protect the world’s largest collective body of fresh water from the bitter bite of the lamprey. He shared his finds related to using Environmental DNA monitoring to help control populations of lamprey

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Rising Higher: A Research Lab Built from the Ground Up - Part 2

A state-of-the-art invasive species laboratory is being built on the shores of Lake Huron at the United States Geological Survey Hammond Bay Biological Station (USGS HBBS). The biological station is one of seven field stations of the USGS Great Lakes Science Center, and is operated via a decades-long partnership with the Great Lakes Fishery Commission.

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Great Lakes Researchers Go Down Under

Movement studies of Great Lakes fishes were a featured topic at the 4th International Conference on Fish Telemetry in Cairns, Australia, this past summer. The conference included presentations by researchers tracking marine and freshwater fishes worldwide using a variety of telemetry technologies.

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Rising Higher: A Research Lab Built from the Ground Up

A state-of-the-art invasive species laboratory is being built on the shores of Lake Huron at the USGS HBBS. The biological station is one of seven field stations of the USGS Great Lakes Science Center, and is operated via a decades-long partnership with the Great Lakes Fishery Commission.

more ...