> "It's impossible to round up all of them. It's like trying to empty the ocean with a thimble," said Kevin Scheers, of the Flemish Institute for Nature and Woodland Research.
What? why don't they just...
> Belgian law prohibits the poisoning of the crayfish, which was a method of control used in Spain.
One million, seven hundred seventy-one thousand, five hundred sixty-one. That's assuming one crayfish, multiplying with an average litter of ten, producing a new generation every 12 hours, over a period of three days.
Silly me...we can just take this "well tailored disease" down off the shelf. It's next to the disease that takes out invasive rats, kudzu and cockroaches with no potential side effects. Couldn't be simpler. Nope...no delusion here.
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[ 0.24 ms ] story [ 43.4 ms ] threadWhat? why don't they just...
> Belgian law prohibits the poisoning of the crayfish, which was a method of control used in Spain.
Ah.
That is the best headline I've seen in a while. All it lacks is celebrity nudity.
I thought that was one of the benefits of sexual reproduction.