From the first settlement in Illinois to today, fisheries activities in Illinois are very important for returning to the daytime. People need to support their families, and now many people think this is a pleasant exercise. Fishing has also evolved from previous ways and still uses some traditional methods. The equipment also changed overtime hours, but the fish caught did not change much. Fishing is essential to the lives of the people of Illinois and evolved into a wonderful sport.
On Thursday morning, 20th May 2010, staff members of the organization gathered from the Illinois State Resources Bureau (DNR), the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), the US Geological Survey, the Illinois Natural History Survey, and the US Coast Guard. The banks of the Little Calimet River take action. According to the Asian Catfish Regional Coordinating Committee, this action is a one-week adjustment work to evaluate the mass breeding of Asian calves in the designated "high-risk" area of Little Calmette. At the heart of this study, Illinois DNR and USFWS are 2.5 miles with Rotenon, a US toxic plant insecticide commonly used by US wildlife and water authorities to destroy fish We flooded the river. Rotenon works by licking fish in the blood and disturbing the breathing of the cell.
People proposed that squid disposal. Fish swim with bureaucracy and the weeds of the human cross. The testing of Asian salmon DNA in the waters of Chicago showed that these fish may have crossed barriers since 2009. In February 2010, Illinois continued DNA testing, wanted to suppress neighboring countries and start an intensive plan to use electric fishing for real fish and fish. These efforts became more DNA, but it did not become a fish. In March, Illinois D.N.R. announced that it was a canal system throughout Chicago, asian catfish was not found in a 6-week search. Then, on June 22, a commercial fisherman working for DNR. A big fish of 19 pounds and 6 pounds was captured at Calumet Lake. 30 miles from electric barriers, 6 miles from Lake Michigan. There is no barrier to intervention between this healthy and healthy Asian squid and the Great Lakes.