Hydrilla is like AIDS, you cant stop it, only hope to contain/slow it. If it gets too thick and you kill it then it goes to the bottom and creates an area of anoxic goo on the bottom that will never go away, or support other plant life, lots of lakes like that here in florida. Dont waste your time or brain cells on trying to bring hydrilla back into the state, because millions of dollars will need to be spent to control/erradicate it when, not if it gets out of control.
Oh yeah, not too mention everybody and his cousin would want to hunt it, and they would intentionally or unintentionally move it around. You could call it hydrilla pond WMA.
"It's a numbers game" - Mac Owen
Endangered: Farmers, Watermen, and Rural Life
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