Malheur’s aftershock

Malheur’s aftershock

Invasive carp may recolonize areas they were once eradicated from
Ammon Bundy sits in an office at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge near Burns, Oregon, on Jan. 5. The leader of a group of armed men who took over a U.S. wildlife refuge in remote southeastern Oregon said on January 6, 2016 they know they will have to go home, but that they want to see progress on their grievances first and it is not “quite time yet.”
A boatload of invasive carp at Malheur Lake. As the carp stirred up gunk at lake bottom, the lake grew cloudier, blocking sunlight from reaching aquatic vegetation. The plants died, and the insects they sheltered disappeared.

Malheur’s aftershock

Ammon Bundy sits in an office at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge near Burns, Oregon, on Jan. 5. The leader of a group of armed men who took over a U.S. wildlife refuge in remote southeastern Oregon said on January 6, 2016 they know they will have to go home, but that they want to see progress on their grievances first and it is not “quite time yet.”
A boatload of invasive carp at Malheur Lake. As the carp stirred up gunk at lake bottom, the lake grew cloudier, blocking sunlight from reaching aquatic vegetation. The plants died, and the insects they sheltered disappeared.
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