Invasion of the Snakeheads
The voracious "Frankenfish" has turned up in the Potomac River, Lake Michigan and a California lake, sparking fears of an ecological Armageddon. But is the Asian import a monsteror the victim of monster hype?
- By Helen Fields
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2005, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
Electrofishing, a common sampling method in fisheries research, isn’t meant to kill fish. But it may knock them out for a while. (It’s not considered sporting and requires a special permit.) Odenkirk nosed the boat in and out of the empty slips at the Mount Vernon Yacht Club a couple of miles downriver from Little Hunting Creek. Tiny fish leapt out of the water as others lolled gracelessly on their backs, stunned, just below the surface. Biologist Steve Owens and technician Scott Herrmann leaned over the bow clutching long-handled nets. Afish’s response to the electrical current depends on its skeletal structure, scales, size and how close it is to the wires. “Snakeheads are—they’re kind of bad-asses,” Odenkirk said. “They don’t like the juice and they try to avoid it.” Still, a snakehead that got close to the trailing wires would be stunned and surface, for Herrmann or Owens to snag. At least, that was the theory. We sped back up the Potomac past Mount Vernon to Little Hunting Creek, where the first Potomac snakehead was caught by a fisherman back in May. At the end of an hour and a half of electrofishing, the catch included many carp, several species of catfish, a bunch of goldfish, a long-nosed gar, a turtle— and zero snakeheads. Odenkirk said he’s always conflicted after an unsuccessful day of snakehead fishing. On the one hand, he said, he was disappointed he’d failed to catch one. On the other, “you’d be happy if you never saw one again.”
Though we didn’t see any snakeheads that day, Odenkirk says he’s sure the fish is established in the Potomac or soon will be. “It’s just not even an option that we’ve caught them all.” He says the fish probably nest in wide, shallow expanses of lily pads and wetlands. “We just can’t get back in those areas.”
But other officials say they’re not convinced the fish are here to stay. Steve Early, assistant director in the fisheries service at the DNR, worked on the Crofton pond in 2002 and has handled some of the Potomac snakeheads. He thinks the fish were only very recently dumped in the river, perhaps after Virginia’s 2002 ban on snakehead ownership. He points out that most of the snakeheads caught this year have been 2 to 6 years old, and that if they’d been living in the Potomac for years, surely someone would have caught one before. Early remained unpersuaded even after a baby snakehead was found in a Potomac tributary this past September. It was the 20th northern snakehead caught in the Potomac watershed, and the first juvenile. “Well, it’s not good news,” he says of the discovery, but points out that if some snakeheads do manage to reproduce, they may never thrive in the big river. Their future also depends on whether other fish in the Potomac develop a taste for snakehead fry.
For now, scientists are working on figuring out how the adults got there. It’s a critical question—if the fish were just recently dumped in the river, there’s a chance they’ll die without having generated a self-sustaining population—but it will require more than a rod and reel or a stun gun to answer.
Behind a door at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. rest specimens from the world’s largest fish collection. Smithsonian ichthyologist Thomas Orrell walked down an aisle between rows of gray metal shelves containing jars with labels such as “China 1924.” Orrell held up a jar marked Channa argus, the northern snakehead. “They’re really beautiful fish,” he said.
Orrell is trying to learn if the northern snakeheads caught this past summer in the Potomac were born there. He’s analyzing DNA from 16 fish; if some of the Potomac specimens are closely related, it’s likely that the fish bred in the river. If they’re not kin, they were likely dumped in the river. Orrell is also comparing the DNA of Potomac fish with that of those caught in the Crofton pond, testing the idea that someone might have captured juveniles before the pond was poisoned and released them in the Potomac.
Orrell led me down a bare stairwell into the museum’s basement, past sandbags piled near an entrance in case of heavy rain and a walk-in freezer that smelled of long-dead fish, containing, among other things, an enormous tuna frozen since the 1960s. He lifted the top of a nearby freezer chest, rooted around and pulled out a long, black lump. “Watch out for flying debris,” he said, unwrapping a black garbage bag and scattering pieces of frozen blood. Inside was one of the most recent Potomac catches: a dark, diamond-patterned snakehead more than a foot long, now solid as a rock. After showing it off, Orrell shrugged, wrapped it up, laid it back in the freezer and washed his hands. He already knows whether the snakeheads are reproducing in the Potomac, but he isn’t telling; adhering to scientific protocol, Orrell declines to share his data until they’ve been reviewed by other experts and published in a scientific journal.
If northern snakeheads do have some ecological impact in the Potomac, largemouth bass are likely to suffer, says U.S. Geological Survey fishery biologist Walter Courtenay, who in 2002 wrote a snakehead risk assessment for the agency. The two species have similar habitats and would probably eat each other’s young. Capt. Steve Chaconas, one of only a few full-time fishing guides on the Potomac, does not like snakeheads one bit. “Of course, I’m worried about what potential it could have to impact the fishery,” he says. “Also because I’m a businessperson and my business relies entirely on people coming here to fish.” Even now, he says, customers ask how much the snakeheads have hurt fishing. It’s hard to estimate the extent of the snakehead’s impact on largemouth bass and other Potomac species. The northern snakehead was introduced to rivers in Japan in the early 20th century, but there has been little study of its ecological effects there. (The largemouth bass, native to North America, was introduced to Japanese waters in 1925 and is reportedly terrorizing native fish and snakeheads alike.)
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Comments (27)
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When did the invasion begin?
Posted by Bob on October 24,2012 | 01:16 PM
I still have the fish I need to have it identified .none of the conservation agents in my area are availiable.
Posted by Kurtis prinster on June 15,2012 | 02:58 PM
I caught one of these fish in the mississippi river north of lock and dam 25 missouri
Posted by Kurtis prinster on June 15,2012 | 02:38 PM
i love the northern snake head
Posted by jay on May 2,2012 | 07:32 PM
I think these fish should be wiped out if they are a threat to other native fish i dont know about you guys but i actually like to fish for bass i dont want to be catching some stupid chinese fish hopefully someone does something bout it
Posted by brandon on May 1,2012 | 02:51 PM
i wanna get this fish cuse its not mean people just get it upset. thats why it trys to bite people thay are slinent invaders but i sitll love fish i will do my best to keep my snakehead safe. thats if the govermint dont takes it.
Posted by anthony on April 26,2012 | 10:17 AM
Snakehead fish aren't dangerous at all. My whole life i have eaten them. they have lived in our field ponds and lakes with no decline of other fish. today they are hardly existing in Goa, India due to chemicals entering water.
I eat the snakehead fish regularly in Thailand, Philippines etc. as a child we used to collect them and put them in bottles. they lived in our well till a few years ago and we drank that well water. today our well waters are polluted.
there is nothing dangerous about the snakehead fish. I am talking about the one which ia in india and south east asia. i think the biggest they grow is about 50 cms not more. You can go to any Thai water lake where people feed them and you can see thousands of them. yes, they can live with very little water and hibernate for half the year during dry season and come out at first rains.
In the photo showing on the net where the snake head fish was caught in Maryland - this is the same snakehead fish i am talking about. I don't think it eats other fish. other fishes thrived as well as this fish in our pond. Chemicals have killed all the native fresh water fish in Goa including the snakehead fish.
the truth was the septic tank and bathwater was coming from the new housing on the hill which eventually killed all of them. the ponds are silted now in our field but there are no snake head fish left. Though quite hardy they could not withstand the chemicals.
The main point is - there was no decline of other fish when this fish inhabited the same space. it is not a horror fish at all. It is a very warm loving fish, just looks ferocious like a bulldog does, but quite harmless. Americans should visit the habitats of this fish.
thailand is the best place to see thousands and thousands of this fish in the lakes and ponds and barbecued too in the markets.
never mind - just go to thailand and see them. And all of Thailands fresh water fish species are intact.
Posted by reiner on December 8,2011 | 12:52 PM
Snakehead was caught in the Appomattox. This is a tributary of the James River which feeds into the Chesapeake Bay.
Posted by gsf on November 12,2011 | 07:31 PM
Any snakehead above 700 grams will yield 2 pieces of great tasting fillet. So stop complaining and just eat them. They aren't all that dangerous to be honest. A good whack on the head with a stick will kill them for sure.
Posted by Nicholas Chin on October 10,2011 | 09:22 AM
I felt awkful when I first heard about the terror of snakehead. This fish is good food in China. They promote healing. As a kid I often saw them in kitchen sink and I pet them as they appeared gentle...you know it's not easy to find living animal in skycrapper city. There are not many of them so they are not cheap. If they can grow as fast as they are said in America I bet poor people in Asia won't be starving. My old nanny told me this fish never die, so its name in Chinese is living fish. And village people keep them in well and they don't need to be fed.
Posted by kk on September 12,2011 | 04:27 PM
you talk about the gar taking on some of these snakeheads? gar compared to snakeheads is like comparing the difference between street drugs you put a person on weed theyll be cool this is the gar...... usually mellow slow to eat very fast not very aggressive however you take the snakeheads its like putting somebody on crack and roid rage at the same time.... they swallow things whole... they are territorial...... insane fish... gar has armor speed and size....... but this battle comes down to numbers and gar cant compete with thousands of angry immigrants if they want to come theyre comin folks cant wait to taste one though or fight one for that matter lol happy hunting
Posted by brandon on April 13,2011 | 01:31 AM
hey what do baby bullseye snakehead look like need to know all over the place south florida .... all in my pond just would like to know
thank you
steve
Posted by steve o on March 31,2011 | 10:04 PM
I found a snakehead today, believe it or not! Thats why I am on this site looking for some more info. I live in Appomattox Va. It was in my minnow trap that the kids always like to stop to look at. In a little creek behind my house.
Posted by Ben Almond on December 9,2010 | 09:35 PM
In Indonesia and Malaysia, fishing guides recommend targeting these things using ducklings as livebait. You can buy the ducklings by the cage and you put a wide-mouthed hook through the webbing in the foot.
Posted by sbe on April 8,2010 | 11:47 PM
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