Tens of thousands of fish have been bleeding to death from an aggressive Ebola-like virus in North America's Great Lakes.

Officials fear that the plague will spread to devastate waters across the continent.

The epidemic - caused by what one United States Government scientist calls "the most important and dangerous fish virus known worldwide" - is believed to have been brought into the lakes by ocean-going ships.

It is focusing attention on the scores of alien species already spreading uncontrolled in the lakes, which contain a fifth of the world's fresh water.

State governments are belatedly trying to introduce measures to control this "living pollution", only to be sued by shipping companies for "placing an undue burden" on them.

The killer - called viral haemorrhagic septicaemia - has already affected 37 species of fish in the lakes, including salmon, trout, perch and white bass. Almost every species caught commercially or for sport in the lakes' $5.5 billion fishery has been hit.

Victims bloat up and bleed from bulging eyes before dying. The extraordinarily virulent disease is sweeping rapidly through the lakes and is expected to start going on full rampage again within the next couple of weeks when the water warms up to its favoured temperature.

When first discovered, just two years ago, the virus was affecting only two species in a few patches of water, but it quickly spread to Lakes Ontario and Erie and to Lake St Clair, on which Detroit stands.

It has recently been confirmed in Lake Huron, and is expected to reach Lake Michigan soon.

"Updates over the winter suggest that it has spread further than we thought, even last year," says John Dettmers, a fisheries biologist for the Great Lakes Fisheries Commission.

"As much as I'd like to say we know exactly what is going on, we don't.

"We're all waiting to see how bad it's going to be this year."

Genetic tests show that the virus probably originated in the Atlantic off New Brunswick, Canada, next to the start of the St Lawrence Seaway, the shipping route that leads to the lakes. That points the finger squarely at the 220 ocean-going ships that enter the lakes each year as the source of the plague.

Ships take in ballast water to steady them when they are sailing without a cargo, only to discharge it when they reach the ports where they load up.

However, the water is inevitably populated by species of fish, plants and viruses which are then given free rides around the globe. Some flourish vigorously in their new surroundings, creating plagues.