Angling’s representative body the Angling Trust has welcomed the Environment Agency’s announcement that proposed charges for trapping American non-native crayfish are to be dropped.
 The Angling  Trust submitted a response to the recent consultation on this subject urging  the Environment Agency not to introduce this very unpopular charge.  Trust  staff are delighted that anglers’ views have been taken into account.  A  rapidly growing number of waters have been infested with signal crayfish, which  eat young fish and eggs, burrow into river banks, and can make angling  impossible in some waters.  The non-native crayfish also carry a plague  against which native English crayfish have no immunity.
The Angling  Trust submitted a response to the recent consultation on this subject urging  the Environment Agency not to introduce this very unpopular charge.  Trust  staff are delighted that anglers’ views have been taken into account.  A  rapidly growing number of waters have been infested with signal crayfish, which  eat young fish and eggs, burrow into river banks, and can make angling  impossible in some waters.  The non-native crayfish also carry a plague  against which native English crayfish have no immunity.
  
  Mark Lloyd,  Chief Executive of the Angling Trust said:
“signal crayfish are a menace to  fish and fishing and every effort must be taken to stop their spread and reduce  their numbers.  We are pleased that common sense has for once  prevailed.  The EA should never have given permission for them to be  allowed into the country in the first place.  To charge anglers and  fishery managers for removing such a damaging critter from rivers and lakes  would have been ridiculous.”
Licences will  continue to be required to ensure that traps are properly designed and that  trapping doesn’t cause damage through spread of disease.
  
  Source: Angling Trust Fishing News
  
  
  
  
  
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