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Pet goldfish dumped into lakes are growing into football-sized monsters
#1
[Image: 486591fcf35f46eb93b119f8dd71aca7.png]
Meet the 1.9-kg goldfish terrorising local ecosystems.


If your kid has some goldfish that he won at a fair and he no longer wants them, you might want to think twice about dumping them in a lake.


Quote:Goldfish (Carassius auratus) are cute and low-maintenance pets, but research has shown that when they end up in lakes and rivers, they can grow up to 10 times their original size and travel long distances, making them an incredibly invasive pest.

A team of Australian researchers has reported finding wild goldfish that weigh up to 1.9 kg (4 pounds), and they're wreaking havoc on the local ecosystem.

The researchers are studying the Vasse River in southwest Australia, which had goldfish introduced into it more than two decades ago, and has seen the population surge over the past 12 years. The most likely cause of the infestation was pet owners.

"Perhaps they were kids' pets where the family have been moving house and their parents, not wanting to take the aquarium, have dumped them in the local wetlands," lead researcher Stephen Beatty from Murdoch University in Perth, told ABC News.

"Unfortunately a lot of people don't understand that wetlands connect up to river systems and introduced fish, once they get in there, can do a lot of damage to native freshwater fish and the aquatic habitat."


Linky


Hard to imagine, a sweet innocent gold fish that size, much less terrorizing the local ecosystem.
But evidently they are.

So what's so bad about these over-sized goldfish?


Quote:Not only do the fish, which are native to eastern Asia, grow as large as resources will allow - which in this case, is pretty big - they're also carnivorous.

"They cruise along the bottom stirring up the substrate with their feeding strategy, this can re-suspend nutrients into the water column which exacerbates things like algal blooms," said Beatty. "They can also disrupt aquatic plants and eat other fish's eggs."

The team also suspects that goldfish have introduced at least one disease to the region already, and are responsible for a decline in native freshwater fish species.


Australia is not the only country to see this problem.
But in the U.S. in some areas, as well as Canada.


Who'd a thunk that would pose an issue, releasing goldfish into the wild?
Figured something would eat them eventually or something,  but not if they are thriving and getting up to 4 pounds.

a.k.a. 'snarky412'
 
        

#2
Great Flathead Catfish Bait.
Illegal in Arizona to use for bait, but Great if you want a Big Flathead. 
[Image: arizona-catfish.jpg]
Once A Rogue, Always A Rogue!
[Image: attachment.php?aid=936]
#3
Gold fish are a type of carp. Carp get pretty big. Once I had 3 of them out of South Holston Lake that were about 4 feet long each, and quite a bit more than 4 pounds apiece. Cleaned 'em and canned 'em like salmon, and it loaded up two whole shelves in the cellar house with carp in mason jars.

Those big ass Coy or Koi, or however you spell that which you see in ornamental ponds are a type of gold fish, and they get pretty big, too. I've seen gold fish in the same sort of ponds a foot long, so they do get pretty big. I'd imagine they could fill any ecological niche that carp currently occupy.

I'm not above eating gold fish that big, either.
Diogenes was eating bread and lentils for supper. He was seen by the philosopher Aristippus, who lived comfortably by flattering the king.

Said Aristippus, ‘If you would learn to be subservient to the king you would not have to live on lentils.’ Said Diogenes, ‘Learn to live on lentils and you will not have to be subservient to the king.’




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