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home > Environmental Issues > Invasive Species > AIS Management Plan
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Aquatic Invasive Species Management Plan <

(click here) to download the Lake Tahoe Region Aquatic Invasive Species Management Plan. (November 2009; 3.6 MB Download)

The Plan has been approved by the Aquatic Nuisance Species Task Force and endorsed by the Governors of Nevada and California and the TRPA executive director.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the California Tahoe Conservancy, and the Lake Tahoe AIS Coordination Committee have worked together to compile this plan. All involved agencies appreciate the role the public has played in creating the plan and is thankful for the efforts of everyone to prevent the spread of AIS to the Lake Tahoe Region.  Aquatic invasive species threaten the economic, environmental, and aesthetic value of this important resource to states of California and Nevada.

The goals of the Plan are to:

  • Prevent new introductions of AIS to the Tahoe Region
  • Limit the spread of existing AIS populations in the Tahoe Region, by employing strategies that minimize threats to native species, and extirpate existing AIS populations when possible
  • Abate harmful ecological, economic, social and public health impacts resulting from AIS

Aquatic invasive species such as thick growths of invasive aquatic weeds, clams, snails, and even warm water fish threaten waterways in a number of ways. Consequences of establishment include degradation of water quality, loss of important habitat to native species, impacts to water conveyance structures, and negative economic impacts to the Lake Tahoe Region. Without substantial and coordinated AIS prevention, monitoring, control, education, and research efforts, changes to the Lake Tahoe ecosystem could result in severe impacts to the local economy and unique natural setting.

Aquatic invasive species are known to be transported from infested lakes and rivers via a variety of pathways, for example, recreational watercraft, fishing gear, waders, construction machinery, and rafts. These unwanted species include: the notorious zebra and quagga mussels, Eurasian watermilfoil and curlyleaf pondweed (aquatic weeds), and Asian clams.  Despite public awareness campaigns and regulations prohibiting their introduction, both plant and animal invaders are found on boats traveling to or preparing to launch in Lake Tahoe and other waterbodies in the Region.

Additional studies have been carried out by researchers at the University of Nevada, Reno to measure the survivability and inherent risk of Quagga mussels at Lake Tahoe.

(click here) for an overview of the Survivability Study.

Additional information about aquatic invasive species:

(Aquatic Nuisance Species Task Force)

(California AIS Management Plan)

(California Department of Fish and Game, AIS documents)

(California Department of Fish and Game, Invasive Species Program)

(Stop Aquatic Hitchhikers)

(Tahoe Regional Planning Agency)

(Tahoe Resource Conservation District, Lake Tahoe AIS Sub-program)

(U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Aquatic Nuisance Species Research Program)

(U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Invasive Species Information Center)

(Western Regional Panel on Aquatic Nuisance Species)

Contacts and Links <

For more information about Aquatic Invasive Species, please contact the Fish and Wildlife Program Manager.

Ted Thayer
Fish & Wildlife Program Manager
Tahoe Regional Planning Agency
PO Box 5310
Stateline, NV 89449-5310

Email: (aisplan@trpa.org)

(Western States AIS Contacts and Links)

Protecting Lake Tahoe since 1969 phone: (775) 588-4547 • email - trpa@trpa.org
mailing address: PO Box 5310, Stateline, NV 89449 • physical address: 128 Market Street, Stateline, NV 89449
Website information subject to change without notice