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Fishing regulation changes slow spread of Asian Carp

asian carpKDWPT

PRATT–Many anglers remember when the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT) changed bait regulations in 2012 to limit the use of wild-caught bait to within the drainage where collected as well as the 2013 amendment to lessen restrictions for bluegill and green sunfish. The intent of these regulations was to prevent the spread of aquatic nuisance species such as Asian carp, white perch, and zebra mussels. Sampling conducted earlier this year appears to show that anglers adhering to the bait regulations helped slow the spread of Asian carp through Kansas waters.

In July 2015, KDWPT partnered with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) to sample 11 locations from six river basins throughout Kansas to detect the presence of environmental DNA (eDNA) left behind by bighead and silver carp (collectively known as Asian carp). Over a three-day span, two field crews, each comprised of two KDWPT Aquatic Nuisance Species (ANS) program staff and one USFWS staff, collected 204 eDNA samples. An additional USFWS crew, manning a portable trailer with cooled centrifuges, prepared the samples for shipment to and processing by the USFWS Whitney Genetics Lab in LaCrosse, Wis.

Results were released to KDWPT earlier this month and are available at http://www.fws.gov/midwest/fisheries/eDNA.html, but to summarize, none of the samples collected contained Asian carp eDNA. ANS program coordinator Jessica Howell has a good guess as to why.

“We believe the bait regulations have had a positive impact on protecting our natural resources from ANS such as Asian carp, as evidenced by the apparent lack of spread of bighead and silver carp throughout the state,” said Howell. She went on to add that locations such as Atchison State Fishing Lake and the Kansas River above the Bowersock Dam in Lawrence are areas we would have expected to see positive samples if the fish were moved upstream. Instead, these popular fishing locations were negative for eDNA, despite downstream populations where reproduction by the fish has been documented.

Regulations were changed because ANS, including Asian carp and white perch, can easily be confused with similar-looking native species by anglers catching bait. Small bighead and silver carp look very similar to native gizzard shad. White perch look very similar to native white bass. When the KDWPT Commission amended the regulations in 2013 to allow bluegill and green sunfish to be moved, part of the decision was that bluegill and green sunfish do not look like invasive fish currently in Kansas (bighead carp, silver carp, and white perch).

Anglers and boaters should be aware of Kansas regulations enacted to prevent the spread of aquatic nuisance species, including:

Wild-caught bait must be used in the common drainage where collected and may not be moved upstream of a dam or natural fish barrier. Bluegill and green sunfish collected from non-designated aquatic nuisance waters may be possessed as live bait anywhere in the state.
No live fish may be taken from designated aquatic nuisance waters, including sport, non-sport, and baitfish.
Anglers fishing with bait purchased from a commercial dealer must have the receipt in their possession while fishing with purchased bait.
Boaters must pull drain plugs and drain livewells and bilges before transporting their boat on public highways.
It is illegal to possess certain species or to release wildlife on department lands or waters, federal reservoirs, and navigable publicly owned rivers.
KDWPT recommends that all water users Clean, Drain, and Dry all equipment after each use to prevent the spread of aquatic nuisance species.

Clean – Remove all plants, animals and mud; thoroughly wash everything, especially crevices and hidden areas.
Drain – Eliminate all water before leaving the area, including livewells, ballast and engine cooling water. Dispose of unused bait on land or in an approved bait receptacle.
Dry – Allow five days for your equipment to completely dry before transporting to other waters. If you cannot wait five days, clean your boat with high-pressure hot water (140 degrees for 10 seconds of contact).
For more information on eDNA sampling efforts, and how you can help play a part in the fight against ANS, visit www.protectKSwaters.org or contact Howell at [email protected].

Royals return to World Series, beat Blue Jays in ALCS Game 6

By DAVE SKRETTA
AP Sports Writer

Mike Moustakas homers to give the Royals a 2-0 lead in the second inning. (Chris Vleisides)
Mike Moustakas homers to give the Royals a 2-0 lead in the second inning. (Chris Vleisides)

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Lorenzo Cain sprinted home from first base on Eric Hosmer’s single in the eighth inning, Wade Davis weathered a 45-minute rain delay and a white-knuckle ninth, and the Kansas City Royals beat the Toronto Blue Jays 4-3 Friday night to earn their second straight trip to the World Series.

The victory in Game 6 of the AL Championship Series sent the Royals into the World Series, starting Tuesday night at home against the New York Mets.

After the delay, Cain promptly worked a leadoff walk from closer Roberto Osuna, and Hosmer followed with a clean single that Bautista fielded down the right-field line.

Rather than hit the cutoff man, though, Bautista threw to second to keep Hosmer to a single. That gave the speedy Cain, running full speed the entire way, enough time to beat the relay throw from second base with a textbook slide that ignited a sellout crowd.

Davis retired Josh Donaldson on a grounder with runners on second and third to end it.

FHSU volleyball battles in first set but falls to No. 12 Central Missouri

FHSU Athletics

HAYS, Kan. – Fort Hays State fell to No. 12 ranked Central Missouri in straight sets on Friday evening (Oct. 23). The Tigers had three set point opportunities in the first set, but fell 32-30, before dropping the next two sets 25-14 and 25-19. The Tigers moved to 13-11 overall and 4-7 in the MIAA, while the Jennies moved to 20-3 overall and 8-2 in the MIAA.

Fort Hays State trailed 24-22 in the first set before kills by Rebekah Spainhour and Crystal Whitten made it a win-by-two scenario. FHSU fended off another set point with a kill by Megan Anderson and then had three consecutive chances to put the opening set away. A calm and resilient UCM team thwarted every opportunity with solid defense and eventually pulled out the set 32-30.

FHSU remained close in the second set to the point where UCM led 12-11, but then the wheels came off and the Tigers never recovered. UCM went on a 10-0 burst that included five errors by the Tigers. The Jennies won the set by 11. UCM used efficient offense in the third set to put the Tigers away, hitting .378. That upped the Jennies’ hitting percentage to .325 for the match. FHSU hit just .134.

Mallory Flagor  led the Tigers in kills with 11, while Whitten added nine and Spainhour had seven. Hannah Wagy had 33 assists and Kailey Klibbe had a team-high 20 digs.

Carly Sojka led the Jennies with 13 kills, while Maddie Jones added 11. The Tigers had no answer for setter Kourtney Thompson, who picked up nine kills by dumping balls over the net to go with her 37 assists. She hit .750 in the match. Annie Reilly was a defensive machine for UCM, recording 25 digs.

The Tigers return to action on Saturday afternoon (Oct. 24) against Lindenwood at Gross Memorial Coliseum. Match time is set for 2 pm.

High School Football Scoreboard Oct. 23

http://insuringhays.com/6A District 8
*Garden City  21   Wichita NW  38
*Dodge City  34  Hutchinson  72

5A District 6
*Salina Central  38   Great Bend  57
Newton  30   Salina South 53

4A-1 – District 8
*Hays  7   Abilene  38
McPherson  28   Buhler  44

4A-2 – District 7
*Clay Center 35   Colby  42
*Concordia 35   Goodland  0

4A-2 – District 8
*Hugoton  35  Larned  28
*Pratt 7   Holcomb 33

3A – District 14
*Norton  35   Beloit  16
*Russell  19   TMP 6

3A – District 15
Sterling  0   Hoisington  56

3A – District 16
Cimarron  55  Southwestern Heights  12
*Lakin  0   Scott City  55

2A – District 6
*Smith Center  55   Bennington  12
*Ell-Saline  0   Phillipsburg  52

2A – District 7
Plainville  12   Oakley  33

8-Man Division 1 – District 4
*Osborne  40   Wakefield 86

8-Man Division 1 – District 5
*Central Plains  46   Solomon  14

8-Man Division 1 – District 6
*Pratt-Skyline  66 Kinsley  26

8-Man Division 1 – District 7
*Trego Com.  48  Ness City  6
*Hodgeman Co.  0   Spearville  46

8-Man Division 1 – District 8
* St. Francis  46  Stockton 0
*Hill City 18  Logan-Palco  46

8-Man Division 2 – District 7
*Northern Valley  6  Otis-Bison  52

Mid-Continent League
*Ellis 64  Sublette  6

Northwest Kansas League
* Lincoln  54 Quinter 8

Abilene 38, Hays 7
Andale 49, Clearwater 8
Anderson County 22, Iola 21
Andover Central 70, Circle 6
Ashland 46, Fairfield-Cunningham 0
Atchison 25, Basehor-Linwood 20
Atchison County 24, McLouth 20
Attica/Argonia 56, Norwich 0
Augusta 42, Coffeyville 0
Axtell 60, BV Randolph 12
Bishop Miege 42, Louisburg 6
Blue Valley Stillwell 49, Olathe South 16
Buhler 44, McPherson 28
Burlingame 48, Peabody-Burns 0
BV Northwest 21, Gardner-Edgerton 7
Caldwell 66, South Haven 20
Central Burden 54, Sedan 32
Central Plains 46, Solomon 14
Centralia 44, St. Mary’s 15
Centre 54, Wilson 8
Chase 52, Tescott 0
Cheney 35, Anthony-Harper-Chaparral 28
Cherryvale 28, Riverton 24
Colby 42, Clay Center 35
Columbus 54, Frontenac 43
Concordia 35, Goodland 0
Conway Springs 50, Belle Plaine 16
Crest 56, Southern Coffey 20
Derby 51, Wichita South 13
Dighton/Healy 46, South Gray 8
Douglass 14, Bluestem 6
Ellinwood 40, Little River 24
Ellis 64, Sublette 6
Erie 39, Northeast-Arma 14
Eudora 27, DeSoto 24
Fort Scott 28, Labette County 25
Frankfort 58, Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 8
Fredonia 42, Eureka 0
Galena 49, Southeast 0
Girard 26, Burlington 0
Goddard 53, Arkansas City 6
Goddard-Eisenhower 27, Liberal 6
Goessel def. Canton-Galva, forfeit
Great Bend 57, Salina Central 38
Halstead 32, Garden Plain 28
Hartford 65, Altoona-Midway 8
Hesston 27, Council Grove 0
Hoisington 56, Sterling 0
Holcomb 33, Pratt 7
Holton 28, Perry-Lecompton 6
Hoxie 58, Golden Plains 0
Hugoton 35, Larned 28
Hutchinson 72, Dodge City 34
Independence 21, Winfield 14
Ingalls 66, Deerfield 0
Jackson Heights 42, Wabaunsee 7
Jefferson North 58, Maranatha/Immaculata (FB) 20
Jefferson West 35, Royal Valley 21
Junction City 53, Wichita East 0
Kapaun Mount Carmel 51, Andover 27
KC Piper 33, Tonganoxie 6
Kingman 26, Hutchinson Trinity 0
Kiowa County 58, St. John 6
LaCrosse 42, Wichita County 0
Lawrence 31, Olathe North 28
Lawrence Free State 31, Manhattan 14
Lincoln 54, Quinter 8
Logan/Palco 46, Hill City 18
Lyons 21, Ellsworth 13
Madison/Hamilton 50, Flinthills 8
Marion 50, Herington 6
Meade 56, Elkhart 0
Mill Valley 48, Bonner Springs 14
Mission Valley 28, Northern Heights 22
Moscow 21, Fowler 0
Mulvane 42, Wellington 30
Nemaha Central 40, Rock Creek 14
Neodesha 31, Caney Valley 14
Nickerson 47, Chapman 0
Norton 35, Beloit 16
Oakley 33, Plainville 12
Olathe Northwest 24, Olathe East 7
Olpe 28, Chase County 6
Onaga 30, Valley Falls 2
Osawatomie 48, KC Bishop Ward 7
Otis-Bison 52, Northern Valley 6
Ottawa 19, Baldwin 3
Paola 55, Chanute 7
Parsons 62, Baxter Springs 6
Phillipsburg 52, Ell-Saline 0
Pittsburg 35, Blue Valley Southwest 7
Pittsburg Colgan 31, Humboldt 8
Pleasant Ridge 32, Maur Hill – Mount Academy 27
Pratt Skyline 66, Kinsley 26
Pretty Prairie 74, South Barber 26
Rawlins County 56, Oberlin-Decatur 32
Remington 45, Oswego 12
Republic County 26, Valley Heights 21
Riverside 55, Hiawatha 0
Rock Hills 52, Lakeside 6
Rossville 61, Osage City 7
Rural Vista 50, Lebo 14
Russell 19, Hays-TMP-Marian 6
Sabetha 55, Horton 0
Salina Sacred Heart 47, Moundridge 15
Salina South 53, Newton 30
Santa Fe Trail 23, Prairie View 12
Satanta 58, Rolla 8
Scott City 55, Lakin 0
Sedgwick 54, Medicine Lodge 7
Shawnee Heights 41, Topeka West 20
Silver Lake 48, Oskaloosa 0
SM West 56, SM South 0
Smith Center 55, Bennington 12
South Central 54, Macksville 6
Southeast Saline 49, Hillsboro 7
Spearville 46, Hodgeman County 0
Spring Hill 42, KC Sumner 20
St. Francis 46, Stockton 0
St. James Academy 28, KC Turner 0
St. Thomas Aquinas 42, BV West 6
Sylvan-Lucas 48, Burrton 0
Syracuse 40, Johnson-Stanton County 0
Topeka 34, Washburn Rural 10
Topeka Hayden 48, El Dorado 0
Topeka Seaman 48, Highland Park 7
Trego 50, Ness City 6
Triplains-Brewster 61, Weskan 28
Troy 47, Inman 26
Udall 58, Cedar Vale/Dexter 8
Ulysses 57, Rose Hill 7
Uniontown 52, Pleasanton 6
Valley Center 28, Maize 7
Wakefield 86, Osborne 40
Wallace County 52, Cheylin 0
Wamego 18, Smoky Valley 14
Washington County 14, Marysville 0
Wellsville 61, West Franklin 0
West Elk 54, Oxford 8
Wichita Bishop Carroll 42, Maize South 14
Wichita Collegiate 63, Wichita Independent 14
Wichita Heights 27, Emporia 25
Wichita Home School 64, Hutchinson Central Christian 18
Wichita Northwest 38, Garden City 21
Wichita Trinity 52, Haven 7

Russell keeps playoff hopes alive, tops TMP

Russell 19, TMP 6

Russell scored a first quarter touchdown and the Broncos were able to hold the lead the entire game in a 19-6 victory over TMP.  The one yard touchdown run from Kelton Suchy, the first of two for the game, put Russell up 7-0 with only 12 seconds remaining in the first quarter.  That would be the only score of the first half.

The Broncos would take the ball after the opening kickoff of the second half.  They had an 8 play, 69 yard drive to start the second half that ended with the second of the two Suchy one yard touchdown run.  The Broncos led 13-0 going into the fourth quarter.

TMP would recover a Russell fumble at the Bronco 26 yard line.  Two plays later the Monarchs got a 22 yard touchdown run from Luke Ruder.  That would be all that TMP would get.  Russell sealed the game with a 47 yard touchdown run from Reshean Holloway with 6:09 remaining in the game.  Russell improves to 3-5 on the year and 1-1 in 3A, District 14 play.  TMP drops to 1-7 and 0-2 in district play.  The Monarchs will close their season next Thursday in Norton.

JOHN MONTGOMERY POST-GAME

GAME HIGHLIGHTS

Kansas teen hospitalized after 3-vehicle crash

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMWICHITA- A Kansas teen was injured in an accident just before 6p.m. on Friday in Sedgwick County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a red SUV was northbound on Interstate 235 in the left lane.

The SUV changed lanes and struck a 2008 Suzuki Reno driven by Rebekah Shoemann, 19, Wellington.

The red SUV then struck a 2012 Nissan Altima driven by Sheila Fulton, 34, Wichita, and fled the scene.

Shoemann was transported to St. Francis Medical Center.
Fulton and two passengers in the Suzuki were not injured.

All were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Hays Falls At Abilene

By Dustin Armbruster

For a second week in a row the Hays High Indians took on an undefeated team in district play, as they traveled to Abilene on Friday night. For Hays at 0-1 in district play the game was essentially a must win to have a legitimate shot at the 4A-1 playoffs.

The Indians opened the game with a 78 yard kick-off return to the Abilene seven yard line by Jordan Betts.  Hays though could not score on four plays and lost their quarterback Kohlton Meyers to a back injury on the 4th and Goal try.

Abilene would break off a 78 yard run by fullback Parker O’Neal on third down to complete a 6 play 99 yard drive.

With Meyers out of the game and back up quarterback Maddux Winter out with an injury as well, Hays turned to tailback Hunter Brown at quarterback two drives later.  Abilene would score on their next two drives taking a 22-0 lead at the end of the first quarter.

Hays turned the ball over three times in the first half on two fumbles and an interception.  The Indians did find success late in the first half when Brown hit Keith Dryden on a 49 yard touchdown pass to make the score 22-7.  Abilene would make up the points on the kickoff however when Harley Hazlett returned the kick for a touchdown making the score 29-7 at half.

Highlights

Coach Randall Rath

 

There were only five total drives in the second half.  Abilene scored a 30 yard field goal and one yard touchdown run.  Hays punted and drove down inside the one yard line but could not score.

Hays falls to Abilene 38-7 and goes to 2-6 on the year and 0-2 in district play.  Abilene locks up a playoff spot with a 2-0 district record as Buhler also has a 2-0 district record after week 8.  Those two will meet up for district crown in Buhler.

Hays will host McPherson who is 0-2 in district play on senior night at Lewis Field Stadium.

Hays finishes the regular season at home next week for senior night against McPherson.

 

Kan. group reaches funding goal to operate B-29 plane

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita group plans to repair and fly a World War II bomber after hitting its fundraising goal for the project.


The Wichita Eagle reports the group was struggling to gain even half of the $137,000 it was seeking on fundraising website Kickstarter until Thursday. It ended up surpassing its target by more than $3,000, earning some extra cash for restoring the B-29 Superfortress known as “Doc.”

The group that owns the plane, Doc’s Friends, plans to have the aircraft operating before the end of the year, making it the world’s second airworthy B-29.

Doc’s Friends Chairman Jeff Turner says he hopes donations will continue coming in even though the group hit its goal.

More than 750 people committed to donating money to the restoration project. The 30-day campaign will conclude on Oct. 29.

Kansas man faces murder, weapons charges

MurderTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Topeka man has been charged in the fatal shooting of another man earlier this month.

Shawnee County District Court records show that 26-year-old Daris Laron Holliday is charged with second-degree murder in the Oct. 10 death of 43-year-old Keith Leon Reed.

Twenty-eight-year-old Andrea Nichole Godfrey, of Topeka, Godfrey was charged with felony counts of obstruction of apprehension of Holliday and interference with a law enforcement officer.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Holliday and Godfrey were arrested Oct. 11 after a foot chase. The charges against them were filed last week but didn’t appear online until Thursday. Both remain jailed in Shawnee County.

Holliday’s attorney, Mark Bennett, said through a staff member that he has no comment. Godfrey’s attorney didn’t immediately return phone calls from The Associated Press.

Roberts introduces bill to help farmers replace worn-out machinery

RobertsWashington, DC – U.S. Senators Pat Roberts (R-KS) and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) introduced bipartisan legislation to help farmers purchase new equipment and replace worn-out machinery by amending the U.S. tax code to permanently set a five-year depreciation schedule for certain agricultural equipment.

The current tax code sets a seven-year depreciation cost recovery period for agricultural equipment. Changing the depreciation schedule for agricultural equipment to five years would make the tax code more consistent and support rural development by aligning the length of time that farmers can take a depreciation deduction with the average useful life of that property.

“This commonsense legislation will give farmers and ranchers the certainty they need to invest in new, more modern equipment so they can create more jobs and growth in our communities,” said Roberts, chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee. “A five year depreciation schedule allows for predictability and fairness in our overly complex tax code, giving the agriculture community the ability to produce more efficiently and at a lower cost.”

“Agriculture is cyclical in nature with producers making large investments in their crops, livestock, buildings, and equipment,” Klobuchar said. “We need to ensure our tax code is fair for farmers so that they can purchase the modern equipment that will allow them to produce more while spending less. This commonsense legislation will put money back in the pockets of our farmers and ranchers and enable them to grow our agricultural economy and strengthen our rural communities.”

Under the tax code, taxpayers are allowed a depreciation deduction to allow them to recover the costs of investing in certain property, like farm machinery and farm-use motor vehicles. The recovery period for the deduction should match the useful life and financing of that property. According to surveys from the USDA’s Farm Service Agency, on average farmers and ranchers finance farm equipment and machinery for five years.

This bill is supported by the American Farm Bureau Federation and the National Farmers Union.

Justice Dept.: No criminal charges in processing of tax exempt status apps

IRS  Internal revenue service TaxERIC TUCKER, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department is declining to bring charges against Lois Lerner, the former IRS official at the center of a political controversy over the processing of applications for tax-exempt status.

Federal prosecutors announced their decision Friday in a letter to members of Congress.

A firestorm erupted more than two years ago with an inspector general’s audit that said IRS agents had improperly singled out tea party and other conservative groups for extra scrutiny when they applied for tax-exempt status during the 2010 and 2012 elections.

The disclosure set off investigations by the Justice Department and multiple congressional committees.

The House voted to hold Lerner in contempt of Congress last year after she refused to answer questions at two House Oversight hearings. She has since retired.

Kansas Shrine Bowl announces head coaches for 2016 game

Kansas Shrine Bowl Release

kansas shrine bowl logoKANSAS-The Kansas Shrine Bowl Board of Directors would like to announce 2016 Head Coaches for the 43rd Kansas Shrine Bowl All-Star Football game; leading the East squad, Topeka Seaman High School’s, Blake Pierce; and for the West squad, Randall Zimmerman from Junction City High School. 

The 43rd annual Kansas Shrine Bowl will be played Saturday July 30th, 2016 in Emporia, Kansas at Welch Stadium on Emporia State University campus.  Kickoff will be at 7:00 pm.  

Coach Blake Pierce is a 28 year coach, coaching in his fourth Shrine Bowl. Coach Pierce graduated from Topeka Seaman High School in Topeka, Kansas he then went on to Emporia State University where he earned a Bachelor of Science in Education majoring in Biology.   Before becoming head coach at Topeka Seaman, Coach Pierce was an assistant at Washburn Rural High School, Osage City High School and Topeka Seaman High School.

Returning for his seventh Shrine Bowl, Coach Randall Zimmerman has been coaching for 29 years. Before coaching at Junction City High School, Coach Zimmerman has also coached at Sacred Heart High School and Phillipsburg High School. A graduate of Grinnell High School and receiving his Bachelor of Science in Secondary Education at Fort Hays State University, Coach Zimmerman continued his education at Kansas State University where he received his Masters in Educational Leadership.

Nominations for all-star football players have begun, and final rosters will be released at the first of the year. 

All Shrine Bowl events are produced and presented to benefit Shriners Hospitals for Children [SHC]. SHC is a health care system of 22 hospitals dedicated to improving the lives of children by providing pediatric specialty care, innovative research, and outstanding teaching programs for medical professionals. Children up to the age of 18 are eligible for care and receive all services in a family-centered environment, regardless of the patients’ ability to pay. Tickets and additional information are available at www.kansasshrinebowl.com or by calling 800-530-5524.

Kansas man who fled US captured after he returns

Tyler- photo Kan. Dpt. of Corrections
Tyler- photo Kan. Dpt. of Corrections

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The U.S. Marshals Service says a Kansas City, Kansas, man who fled the U.S. two years ago was arrested when he flew back to the country from Africa.

Marshals say Wilson Tyler was arrested Thursday at John F. Kennedy airport in New York. He fled in 2013 after being charged with conspiracy to distribute cocaine and stealing $150. He was tracked to Sierra Leone.

The Kansas City Star reports Tyler was convicted as a teenager of second-degree murder in the 1980 killing of a Kansas City, Kansas, service station clerk. He was convicted of sodomizing another inmate while being held for the murder.

Because of Ebola in Sierra Leone, Tyler will be held in a special unit in New York until he is cleared to return to Kansas.

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