“They
are eating up the food resources and using up the habitat that our native fish
would otherwise be using”
Swan River Trust's
river science environment officer, Dr Jeff Cosgrove, commenting on their published
research into the effect of dumping Goldfish and Koi Carp into Freshwater
Waterways
If
this latest bit of research is to be believed, this is more reason why I have
no plans to own a pet Goldfish or Koi Carp.
At
least, based on research by Murdoch University’s Freshwater Fish Group and Fish
Health Unit in Australia whose study suggest that Goldfish introduced into freshwater environments
literally grow to become threats to aquatic biodiversity as noted in the
article “Check
Out This Photo of a Pet Fish That Grew Into a Feral Aquatic Killer”,
published 9.04.2015 by David Stout, Time.
In
their study,
published on their Freshwater Group Website they discovered that Goldfish
and Koi Carp, often kept as household pets, are miniature while inside the
confines of their fishbowl.
So
how do they grow so large? And if this is happening in Australia, can it happen
here in Jamaica as well, where many Jamaicans own exotic Goldfish and Koi Carp
as pets?
Murdoch University
Freshwater Fish Group say Goldfish and Koi Carp destroy Freshwater Ecosystems -
Kingpins of the Waterways
But once introduced into the wild, often by
persons thinking that they’re setting them free, its becomes an all-you-can-eat
buffet for them as noted in the article “Dumped
aquarium fish decimating native species, hurting habitats”, published
Wednesday 1 April 2015 12:02PM, by Jeremy Story Carter, ABC Australia.
They are able to rapidly grow to gargantuan sizes, eating up algae
and plankton that native species would normally eat that are rich in protein and Nitrates that boost their growth.
Koi Carp, for example, can grow to be up to 1 metre long far larger than
the five to ten (5 to 10) cm species native to a typical freshwater lake and
way bigger than they’d grow in captivity.
Take
a look at this picture of a Koi Carp captured by the Murdoch University’s
Freshwater Fish Group of Goldfish in the wild which was originally released by
their owners.
Being
bigger from eating from an unlimited supply of food, unlike being in the
fishbowl, translates to being more aggressive, albeit this is more of a
correlation than a causation of aggressiveness.
This
aggressiveness makes then out-compete the smaller fish in the lakes and rivers
that many persons introduce them, starving the other smaller native species in
the process as they grow to enormous sizes as this video below dramatically
demonstrates.
Meanwhile,
as Goldfish and Koi Carp tend to be from Japan or South East Asia, they
introduce diseases into the local fish stock, potentially decimating any fish
present and disrupting the Ecosystem by changing the Biodiversity of the
freshwater fish’s environment.
Interestingly
too, the phenomenon isn't restricted to Australia. According to Discovery News'
DNews YouTube Channel, it's already happened in Lake Tahoe in South Dakota, a
lake wedged between California and Nevada, west of Carson City in the United
States of America.
Research Fellow at the Fish Health Unit,
Stephen Beatty has informed Business Insider that Goldfish caught in the Vasse
River in Washington's southwest are also disrupting the ecosystems there with
their largess as explained in the article “Incredible
pictures of giant killer goldfish stalking Western Australia's rivers”,
published APR 6 2015, 8:58 AM by PETER FARQUHAR, Business Insider
So
it's clear then that they have more food. Goldfish and Koi Carp are the Feral
cats of the Freshwater World, out competing local freshwater fish for scarce food
resources.
Goldfish are the Feral
Cats of the Freshwater - Goldfish are the Next Lionfish for Freshwater fish
To
be honest I never knew this, albeit I was aware that some fish, like the Red
Lionfish (Pterois volitans), eat
other smaller fish in the sea as noted in my blog article
entitled “@RFSeafoods
vs the Lionfish - KFC iTwist in Yendi Phillip's Emerald Forest”.
Luckily
for Jamaica, we're finally getting the Red Lionfish (Pterois volitans) population under control. NEPA’s (National Environment and Planning
Agency) MTIASIC (Mitigating the Threat of Invasive Alien Species in the Insular
Caribbean) National Lionfish Project has been recording a success rate of 66%
Reduction since April 2014 as reported in my blog article
entitled “National
Lionfish Project reaps 66% reduction as Lionfish Population is down - NEPA's
MTIASIC suggests Commercial Lionfish Farming possible for Restaurants and Fast
Food Industry”.
We
do this mainly by eating them, quite a tasty way to deal with the problem.
Still,
Red Lionfish (Pterois volitions) are
fish in the sea; had no idea that Goldfish, once introduced to fresh water, could
be as destructive to the ecosystem as these Florida imports.
They
are comparable in some ways to Feral Cats are to birdlife in any country as
noted in my blog
article entitled “The
Zoological Society of London and their Cat Map - How UWI's Department of
Biotechnology, the JSPCA and Telecom Providers can Kick Ass 2 against Feral
Cats and Dogs”, even though Goldfish and Koi Carp don’t eat other fish,
just their food.
In
the case of Feral Cats and Dogs, a Radio Collar Tracking Project could help to
locate and determine their population in order to control their growth as
suggested in my blog article
entitled “Your
Wild Life Cat Tracker Project - How the Jamaica Cat and Dog Migration Project
would reduce impact on Birds and other Fauna”.
In
my estimation, the Feral Dog and Cat population can be as much as six (6) times
the population of Jamaica. So Feral Cats and Dogs are a problem with an
expensive solution; Can Jamaica afford to do the same as it relates to Goldfish
and Koi Carp potential winding up in our Rivers?
Jamaica's Fledgling
Ornamental Fish Export Industry - Why Jamaica needs to discourage releasing Goldfish
into our rivers
Jamaica
already has a vibrant Ornamental Fish Aquaculture Industry, with a potential to
tap into International exports in a market valued at some US$400 million according
to the Minister of Industry, Investment and Commerce, Anthony Hylton as stated
in the article “Jamaica
could earn big money from ornamental fish exports – Commerce Minister”,
published Wednesday, July 30, 2014 | 11:07 PM, The Jamaica Observer.
But
Goldfish and Koi Carp in Jamaica?
We
can still have a vibrant Ornamental Fish Industry, but based on this published
research by Murdoch University’s Freshwater Fish Group and Fish Health Unit in
Australia, we might have to start regulating the Ornamental Fish Industry. Not
to mention I need to do an article on Jamaica’s burgeoning Ornamental Fish
Industry!
Ornamental
Fish Growers, in selling their product, need to also advise pet owners that
they are not to release them into the wild in Freshwater ponds. Best to let
them stay in their little Bowls, as setting them free will create yet another environmental
catastrophe that might be a little harder to deal with by eating them.
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