Mhays wrote:though you certainly don't want to eat anything you catch (there are signs up and down the length of it warning you not to let the water come in contact with your body)
Jay K wrote:Good lord, Dave Hammond's found me at CLF now?!?!?
Just kidding, by the way, the smelt are running in Wisconsin
http://www.chicagolandfishing.com/forum ... ight=smelt
David Hammond wrote:"Catch and release" is a game I never understood; it's almost sadistic.
David Hammond wrote: I chatted with a lady from the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago today -- and she seemed (predictably, perhaps) to downplay the toxic dangers of the waterways, but overall my sense is that the people who fish the rivers and lakes around here eat what they catch....I think smelt dippers and others Chicagoland fishers eat whatever they get, and you know, if one eats corporate meat, with all its antibiotics and evil, then why not eat a fish from the Chicago River?
2008 Illinois Sports Fish Consumption Advisory wrote:SPRINGFIELD, Ill. – The Illinois Department of Public Health today announced its 2008 consumption advisories for sport fish caught in Illinois waters. The advisory includes less stringent advice for some Lake Michigan fish. The following lakes are new to the special mercury advisory this year: Evergreen Lake and Mt. Olive New City Lake. These additions are the result of expanded and directed sampling by the Fish Contaminant Monitoring Program and do not suggest that Illinois fish are becoming more contaminated.
“The advisories are not meant to discourage people from eating fish, but should be used as a guideline to help anglers and their families decide the types of fish to eat, and how to prepare fish for cooking to reduce possible contaminants,” said Dr. Damon T. Arnold, state public health director. “Fish can be an important part of a balanced diet. It is a good source of high quality protein and other nutrients and is low in fat. However, contaminants in fish may make some fish unsafe to eat except in limited quantities, particularly for women of childbearing age and young children.”
While there is no known immediate health threat from eating contaminated fish from any body of water in Illinois, there are concerns about the effects of long-term, low-level exposure to pesticides and chemicals, such as chlordane, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and methylmercury, found in fish listed on the advisories. Methylmercury has been found to cause reproductive damage and have adverse effects on the central nervous system, including developmental delays....