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Indiana

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Associated Press
FILE - In this Thursday, Jan. 5, 2006 file photo, a bighead carp, front, a species of the Asian carp, swims in a new exhibit that highlights plants and animals that eat or compete with Great Lakes native species, at Chicago's Shedd Aquarium. Illinois environmental officials will dump a toxic chemical into a nearly 6-mile stretch of the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2009 to keep the voracious Asian carp from entering the Great Lakes while an electrical barrier is turned off for maintenance. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File)

Asian carp spawn in Wabash River, cause concern

CHICAGO – An environmental coalition says the discovery of spawning Asian carp in the Wabash River in northern Indiana underscores the need for better leadership and coordination to keep the invasive fish out of the Great Lakes.

The Wabash doesn’t flow into the Great Lakes. But it could flood into another river that does – the Maumee River, which flows into Lake Erie.

Last week, officials said a live carp was caught six miles from Lake Michigan.

Biologists fear the giant carp – which can grow to 4 feet and 100 pounds – could destroy the Great Lakes’ $7 billion-a-year fishery by starving out native species.

Several lawmakers have introduced legislation to study a plan to permanently separate waterways linking the Mississippi River and the Great Lakes.