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Black
Carp
The
black carp, Mylopharyngodon piceus, was brought
to the U.S. in the early 1970's from eastern Asia. The
black carp and grass carp resemble each other except
that on the black carp, the gill rakers are fused and
hardened. These gill rakers are used in crushing shells
of mollusks and crustaceans, the primary food of the
black carp. Once established, this species of carp may
help to destroy our already threatened freshwater mussel
and snail populations. The black carp is also known
to feed on zebra mussels. In the 1980's the black carp
was imported for use as a food fish and to control the
spread of trematodes (parasites) in snails at catfish
farms. The only known record of escape occurred in 1994
in Missouri when thirty or more black carp escaped with
several thousand bighead carp into the Osage River in
Missouri. There has been at least one sighting in the
wild on Horseshoe Lake, in Alexander County, Illinois.
Black carp have reached the size of 4.3 ft and over
79 lbs.

Photo
courtesy of Leo G. Nico, U.S.G.S.
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Last updated:
July 10, 2008