No it’s impossible. What poison the whole lake is that a valid solution? Or maybe introduce a species that eats the muscles maybe they we’ll work. Has a highly invasive species ever been successfully removed anywhere?
Have ecological services ever had enough funds and labor power to truly find a solution? Because as far as I’m aware ecologists have to beg for funding and rarely get enough of it. They only get grants if someone thinks they can make money off their research. Anything deemed too difficult or unprofitable just gets ignored unless it provides a public health service and even those get ignored sometimes.
No it’s impossible. What poison the whole lake is that a valid solution? Or maybe introduce a species that eats the muscles maybe they we’ll work. Has a highly invasive species ever been successfully removed anywhere?
Have ecological services ever had enough funds and labor power to truly find a solution? Because as far as I’m aware ecologists have to beg for funding and rarely get enough of it. They only get grants if someone thinks they can make money off their research. Anything deemed too difficult or unprofitable just gets ignored unless it provides a public health service and even those get ignored sometimes.