Snakehead fish returns

jinx

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Sep 25, 2003
Messages
739
The Snakehead, aka Frankenfish, has been caught once again in Maryland, forcing the draining of a five acre lake. Unlike the incident two years ago when this aggressive Asian native was found, this lake has a stream access to the Anacostia and Potomac Rivers.<br /><br />They are manning the pumps this morning to drain the lake with the hopes that this is an isolated incident.<br /><br />The fish caught was 4 years old, and of breeding age.
 

ED21

Master Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Aug 26, 2003
Messages
829
Re: Snakehead fish returns

The guy that caught it said it felt like he latched onto a 70 pound musky. <br />If they don't drain the pond soon, it'll probably be fished out in a few days.
 

revertmastec

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Nov 16, 2001
Messages
279
Re: Snakehead fish returns

Here is the report if anyone is interested. <br /><br />Montgomery County fisherman has bagged a northern snakehead, the same voracious, fin-walking Asian predator that made national news when it took over three Crofton ponds in the summer of 2002.<br /><br />Terry Wintermoyer plucked the nasty customer from Wheaton Regional Park's Pine Lake on Monday afternoon, prompting officials to close the lake to fishing and to make plans to drain it as quickly as possible. The lake's bass and sunfish, numbering in the hundreds, will be pumped out and shipped to other ponds. <br /><br /> <br />The 19-inch snakehead that Wintermoyer caught lived up to the aggressive reputation of its species: as it lay covered in plastic wrap shortly after Wintermoyer landed it, the snakehead bit into the steel-tipped boot of a passer-by.<br /><br />Besides devouring other fish in their environment, snakeheads are known for surviving out of water for long periods and moving on land with their fins.<br /><br />At a lakeside news conference yesterday, Wintermoyer, 23, said he immediately knew he had something special. He used pliers to extract the hook from the snakehead's mouth - thus avoiding its fang-like teeth - and admired his catch for an hour before turning it in to park police.<br /><br />"I hadn't seen anything like that my whole life," he said.<br /><br />Using electroshock to survey the lake's population, state biologists found no evidence of other snakeheads. The process passes an electric current into the water to stun fish within 20 feet, forcing them to float to the surface for examination. The survey turned up hundreds of bass and sunfish, but no snakehead.<br /><br />Even so, officials concede they might have missed a snakehead or two. "I'll be confident when the pond is drained," said Steven Early, assistant director of fisheries for the Maryland Department of Natural Resources.<br /><br />There's no apparent threat to downstream waterways. The pond feeds into the Northwest Branch, a tributary of both the Anacostia and the Potomac rivers, state wildlife officials said.<br /><br />The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, which manages the park, is expected to have crews at the lake today to begin draining it. The process should take about two days, said Doug Redmond, principal natural resources specialist for the commission. The fish in the lake will be put into tanks and taken to other lakes, he said.<br /><br />Redmond said refilling Pine Lake will take one to two weeks if the weather is dry, but a heavy rainstorm could top it off in a couple of days.<br /><br />Early said draining the lake is a good idea. "It's an aggressive form of management, but the right one," he said.<br /><br />Unlike the snakehead incident in Crofton, only one fish has been found - and it was removed before spawning season, Early noted. "We are only aware of a single introduction here and a single capture," he said.<br /><br />In Crofton, the fish multiplied over the summer before officials took action. Biologists eventually poured poison into the lake, killing the predators.<br /><br />Early estimated the Wheaton snakehead to be about 4 years old. He said it was probably dumped in the lake intentionally, violating a state law that was well-publicized after the Crofton incident. Dumping an invasive species into a state waterway is punishable by a $2,500 fine and 30 days in jail.<br /><br />"Obviously, we haven't gotten the word out to everyone," Early told reporters.<br /><br />Wintermoyer, who lives with his grandmother in Silver Spring, said he initially thought the snakehead was a 25- to 30-pound large-mouth bass because of the fierce fight it put up. The fish emerged from under a rock near the spot where he was standing just before he hooked it. "It was probably the worst fighting fish I've seen so far," he said.<br /><br />The discovery of northern snakeheads in the tidy community of Crofton was a major event during the summer of 2002, drawing national attention and prompting jokes by Jay Leno, Regis Philbin and shows on Comedy Central.<br /><br />Local entrepreneurs sold T-shirts bearing a likeness of the ugly fish, and the owner of the ponds hired an independent film crew to capture all the action.<br /><br />The predator has since been the subject of a book published by the Smithsonian Institution and a movie on the SciFi network.<br /><br />Fisherman Paul DiMauro caught the first Crofton fish, an 18-incher, on May 15, 2002. But he took pictures and tossed it right back, thinking he might have caught an endangered species. News of DiMauro's catch surfaced June 22, and nine days later, Crofton angler Joe Gillespie caught a 26-inch snakehead.<br /><br />He also announced that several months earlier, he had hooked a snakehead "the size of a golf bag."<br /><br />When Gillespie netted some baby snakeheads days later, the state convened a panel of 14 experts to draft an extermination plan. In September 2002, scientists poured an herbicide in the three Crofton ponds to kill off vegetation - followed by a lethal dose of the fish poison rotenone.<br /><br />The final Crofton tally - six adults and nearly 1,000 juvenile fish - startled DNR biologists. They believed that the two adult snakeheads originally dumped in 2000 had produced only one crop of young.<br /><br />A local man eventually confessed to dumping two snakeheads into the pond when they outgrew his aquarium. He wasn't charged because the statute of limitations had expired.<br /><br />In Wheaton yesterday, officials said there is little chance of catching whoever dumped this snakehead unless someone volunteers information.<br /><br />U.S. Interior Secretary Gale A. Norton banned the importation and interstate sale of all 25 species of snakeheads in October 2002, saying they were "like something from a bad horror movie."<br /><br />But people continue to sell them privately on the Internet and in pet shops, said Dr. Walter Courtenay, an invasive species specialist based in Florida and known as "Dr. Snakehead" for his expertise.<br /><br />A pet shop owner in Perry, Ohio, was arrested last week for violating the ban after fish and game officers seized four giant snakeheads from aquariums and killed them. The fish, about 19 inches long and weighing 3 pounds, were being offered for sale at $199 each.<br /><br />"Here we go again. Not another Crofton," Courtenay said yesterday.
 

JoeW

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Nov 8, 2003
Messages
664
Re: Snakehead fish returns

Hmmm...How do they taste?<br /><br />We have a problem in a couple of lakes here in CA with pike infestation. Someone dumped some pike in a Sierra lake and the pike were killing off the local rainbows and CA brown trout. Fish&Game first poisened the lake. They were quickly sued by locals as the lake was only water source. It turns out that the poisening didn't work anyway. Pike showed up again 2 yrs latter.
 

Carphunter

Commander
Joined
Aug 11, 2002
Messages
2,061
Re: Snakehead fish returns

We have the same problem here in some lakes, but the good 'ol Carp is the culprit.<br /><br />Now you know where my name comes from. ;)
 

JoeW

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Nov 8, 2003
Messages
664
Re: Snakehead fish returns

Carphunter,<br />I thought carp were indigenous throught the U.S. Why are they such a problem?
 

Elmer Fudge

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
Aug 25, 2003
Messages
1,881
Re: Snakehead fish returns

There been a lot of talk about this in the news a while back,but i did'nt get to see what it looked like.<br />What does this snakehead fish look like? <br />Could someone post a pic of it?
 

Trent

Captain
Joined
Nov 17, 2001
Messages
3,333
Re: Snakehead fish returns

1_21_snakehead_fish.jpg
 

cuzner

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Feb 14, 2004
Messages
771
Re: Snakehead fish returns

Kinda looks like my ex,if they come out with a bounty nobody shoot her :D <br /><br /> Jim :p
 

Elmer Fudge

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
Aug 25, 2003
Messages
1,881
Re: Snakehead fish returns

Thanks for the pic Trent, oh boy! what an ugly fish, and those teeth makes it look quite vicious. I sure would'nt want one of those on the end of my line.
 
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