(Released: September 05, 2018)

Division of Sport Fish
Tom Brookover, Director
Anchorage Headquarters Office
333 Raspberry Road
Anchorage, AK 99518


Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Sam Cotten, Commissioner
P.O. Box 115526
Juneau, AK 99811-5526
www.adfg.alaska.gov


Contact: Kristine Dunker, Fisheries Biologist
(907) 267-2889

Non-Native Bass Caught in Anchorage Lake

(Anchorage) - The Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G), Division of Sport Fish announced today that a local angler caught a juvenile bass on Sand Lake in Anchorage on Monday evening. Bass are not native to Alaska, and it is illegal to transport live fish anywhere in the state. It is not known if this is an isolated incident, or if there are more bass in the lake. Biologists are quickly mobilizing to determine if other bass can be found by using gill nets and rod and reel methods. Early detection of potential non-native species is key if eradication efforts may be necessary.

“This is the first time we’ve learned of bass in Sand Lake,” stated Fishery Biologist Kristine Dunker. “Our primary concern at this time is to determine if there are others, and more importantly, if there is evidence of a reproducing population. Over the next several days ADF&G staff will be concentrating their efforts on Sand Lake to evaluate if other bass are present, and if additional efforts will be needed to remove them."

ADF&G is urging anyone who fishes in Sand Lake to be aware, and closely monitor the fish they catch. If they catch a fish that does not look like a salmon, rainbow trout, or Arctic char which are the only species ADF&G stocks into Sand Lake, please kill, keep the fish, and report it immediately to ADF&G. Do not release it back in to the water live. Bring all suspected non-native species in to the Anchorage ADF&G office at 333 Raspberry Road or call (877) INVASIV or (877) 468-2748.

“If anyone has any information about how bass were introduced into Sand Lake, please contact ADF&G at 1-(877) INVASIV or 1-(877) 468-2748,” stated Dunker.

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