This little fish has already infected ALL of the Great Lakes including the St. Lawrance Seaway. It attackes some of our most favorite game and table fish. It is now on it's way down the Mississippi.<br /><br />I had read bits and pieces about the Goby but never paid much attention to it. I got interested in this topic from another post here. I started to look for more information and what I found was disturbing. Not only could it affect the quantity of fish available it will also affect the quality of the fish from tast to possibly making you sick.<br /><br />I had posted some information on that other thread but rather than taking over that topic I thought it better to start a new topic.<br /><br />It is a very important issue that all of us should at least know something about because we can all help in some way. The ways we can help are easy and don't take a lot of effort on our part.<br /><br />I am posting information I found on the web, there is a lot of information and my intention ie to inform. It's a lot to read and not really fun. <br /><br />Please add your comments or information. One site you can go and get direct up to date information is: http://www.sciencenews.org/sn_arc99/7_31_99/fob1.htm <br /><br />I will post excerpts from sites that contain solid factual information that has been proved to be true.<br /><br />In April 1990, David J. Jude found a round goby in the St. Clair River outside Detroit. A biologist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, he immediately recognized the threat of invasion signaled by the North American debut of this European fish. Almost immediately, as he had feared, the goby began nesting in the adjoining Lakes Huron and Erie. Last week, Canadian officials announced that the fish has reached Lake Ontario. <br /><br />This latest sighting, in Canadian waters near the base of the St. Lawrence Seaway, confirms that the round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) now populates all five Great Lakes, marking a remarkable rate of dispersal. In many shore areas, it has become the dominant fish.<br /><br />Certainly, notes Ron Dermott of Canada's Department of Fisheries and Oceans in Burlington, Ontario, it "should be considered a permanent resident of the Great Lakes."