Northern snakehead fish, which can survive on land, may flee water if it turns too acidic, salty or high in carbon dioxide, according to a new study.
Snakeheads which can eat native species of fish, frogs and crayfish, destroying the food web in some habitats have the ability to survive on land for up to 20 hours if conditions are moist.
In a new study published in the peer-reviewed journal -- Integrative Organismal Biology -- wake forest researcher Noah Bressman reported for the first time the water conditions that could drive snakeheads onto land.
Earlier this month, wildlife resources officials in Georgia advised anglers to kill the fish on sight after one was caught in a Gwinnett County pond, and the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission confirmed that a 28-inch northern snakehead was caught in the Monongahela River in Pittsburgh.
Bressman also observed the fish moving in a way no other amphibious fish do. It makes near-simultaneous rowing movements with its pectoral fins while wriggling its axial fin back and forth. These combined motions could help the snakehead travel across uneven surfaces such as grass.
"Snakeheads move more quickly and erratically than once believed," said Bressman, a Ph.D. candidate and the corresponding author of Emersion and terrestrial locomotion of the northern snakehead on multiple substrates.It would be interesting to see Skye's reaction to snakehead found wandering down the beach.
"The fish we studied moved super quickly on rough surfaces such as grass, and we think they use their pectoral fins to push off these three-dimensional surfaces," Bressman added.
Bressman studied snakehead populations in Maryland, where the fish is considered a threat to the Chesapeake Bay watershed. The Maryland Department of Natural Resources collected snakeheads by electrofishing in tributaries of the Potomac River and adjacent drainage ditches.
The fish tolerated all conditions but high salinity and acidity, and stagnant water with too much carbon dioxide.
Although it is unclear how often snakeheads leave water voluntarily and cross overland to invade other waterways, Bressman said these findings can inform how natural resources agencies plan to contain the fish.
"When snakeheads were discovered on land, it caused a lot of fear because not much was known about them," he said. "Sure, they can move fairly quickly on land, and they have sharp teeth. But you can easily outrun them, and they won't hurt you, your children or your pets.
Darcizzle explains how to deal with snakeheads, using a tropical snakehead that has become invasive in Florida, the Bullseye Snakehead:
I think this is one of several species of tropical snakeheads we used to sell at the tropical fish store I worked in as a teenager in Los Angeles.
The Wombat is on time and under budget with Rule 5 Sunday: Ingrid Pitt at The Other McCain.
s fun to catch as bass, as good eating as walleye.
ReplyDeleteI see tournament potential here. since you can't legally release them, donate them to the poor/needy and everybody wins