Frankenfish Threatening Great Lakes Ecosystem

NATO AIR

Senior Member
Jun 25, 2004
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USS Abraham Lincoln
hope they eliminate this nasty SOB

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6254302/

Frankenfish’ rears its ugly head in Lake Michigan

Voracious non-native fish strikes fear in hearts of marine biologists
A captured snakehead fish. Marine biologists were alarmed at the discovery of the non-native fish in Lake Michigan's Burnham Harbor earlier this week because it could threaten the entire Great Lakes ecosystem.

By Jack Chesnutt
Producer
NBC News
Updated: 11:13 a.m. ET Oct. 15, 2004CHICAGO - It looks like a pike on steroids. But, the northern snakehead, a non-native fish with a voracious appetite, is one fish no one wants in the neighborhood.

This week, fish biologists were alarmed to learn that a Chicago-area fisherman caught a snakehead in his net while fishing in Lake Michigan's Burnham Harbor.

"I hope this is the only one they find in Lake Michigan," Walter Courtnay, of the U.S. Geological Survey told the Chicago Tribune. "If there is a male and female out there, anything can happen."

Major threat to habitat
The snakehead is a potential threat to inland lakes and rivers because it feeds on native fish and can wipe out some species of sport fish. In the Great Lakes, they would compete with popular sport fish like bass and walleye.

Snakeheads can also survive several days out of water if they are kept wet. The fish have earned the nickname "Frankenfish" because of their ability to survive, even after extreme measures are taken to eradicate them.

The Illinois Department of Natural Resources wants to examine the fish to determine if it is, indeed a snakehead. "If it turns out to be one, we are going to have to figure out what to do next," said Joe Bauer of the Illinois DNR. "It would not be good at all."

There are no indications that there are other snakeheads in the same harbor, but if they are found, it's likely an eradication program would be started.

When the fish was discovered in Maryland two years ago in a pond behind a Dunkin' Donuts in Crofton, officials poisoned the entire pond. That is not a likely solution for the Great Lakes.

The lucky fisherman
Matthew Philbin of Tinley Park, Ill. was fishing for salmon over the weekend at Burnham Harbor, which is near downtown Chicago and connected to Lake Michigan. He saw an odd-looking fish.

"I was 7 or 8 feet above the water when the fish swam up toward the wall…. I honestly thought it was a northern pike.… That's clearly not what it was,” Philbin told the St. Paul Pioneer Press.

Philbin had never heard of the northern snakehead, but said the fish looked "really bizarre." What he netted was about 18 inches long with a large mouth filled with many long, sharp teeth. The native of China, Korea and Russia can grow to as much as 3 feet long.

Philbin took the creature home, took digital pictures of it and posted the images on a fishing Web site. "I said, 'Check out this fish. What is it?' It got the attention of a lot of people."

Snakeheads on the move
What troubles many wildlife experts is that the snakehead discovery in the Midwest could represent a huge new habitat with no natural defenses against the predator.

Snakeheads are reported to be so aggressive, they thrash around in aquariums when they are agitated. Federal officials prohibit importing snakeheads or their eggs into the United States.

Since they were found in the Maryland pond, biologists have found what they believe to be a reproducing population in the Potomac River in Virginia and a tributary of the Delaware River.

Illinois officials say they plan to use electric shocks to kill fish in Burnham Harbor as they search for more snakeheads, but they say the shocks only penetrate about three feet of water. Fish in the deep areas may be missed. The best scenario, they say, is that someone dumped their aquarium and the fish caught last weekend is the only one of its kind.

Maryland Department of Natural Resources biologist Steve Early fears that getting rid of the snakehead will be impossible if they spread into the Great Lakes' waterways.

"They're going to affect the food chain from the bottom up. You need to stop them before it's too late," Early told the Chicago Tribune.

Jack Chesnutt is an NBC News producer.
 
I saw some film on these buggers a while back. The crazy things were jumping out of the water as boats went by and people were sitting on the bow and netting em. Gotta admit it looked fun but I feel sorry for the Great Lakes! I wonder if we could get an official statement form PETA regarding how to handle this situation?
 
They are ugly things - could be wrong story, but weren't they dumped their after trying to be imported from China? thought I heard this and that's how these things became and reproduced.

frankenfish.jpg
 
janeeng said:
They are ugly things - could be wrong story, but weren't they dumped their after trying to be imported from China? thought I heard this and that's how these things became and reproduced.

frankenfish.jpg

Thats the ones !!!----I wonder how they are fried ????? :rotflmao:
 
dilloduck said:
Thats the ones !!!----I wonder how they are fried ????? :rotflmao:


YUK!!!!!! I couldn't imagine eating any part of that thing! :puke3:
 
haha,i'd have to not ask what it was before i was eating it....

(this coming from the guy who ate dog in busan, south korea after he was told initally it was chicken... hey, i won't lie, dog tastes good with zesty sauce... damn tricky south korean dog meat sellers)
 
dilloduck said:
Monk fish almost tastes like lobster and its the ugliest SOB you've ever seen !!
Dillo is correct...Monk fish is used widely as imitation Lobster. It is so close in taste most folks can't tell the difference.
Some less than honest restaurants even pawn it of as the real thing.
 
NATO AIR said:
haha,i'd have to not ask what it was before i was eating it....

(this coming from the guy who ate dog in busan, south korea after he was told initally it was chicken... hey, i won't lie, dog tastes good with zesty sauce... damn tricky south korean dog meat sellers)

Oh YUK YUK!!! poor puppy!!! haha! guess your right though, never ask what your getting before trying. I just can't see myself eating a dog though.
 
janeeng said:
Oh YUK YUK!!! poor puppy!!! haha! guess your right though, never ask what your getting before trying. I just can't see myself eating a dog though.

i'll never be able to look my best friend brownie (my ex-g/f's dog, i miss him more than her) in the eyes... i betrayed him and his brothers.....

i was so mad when i found out it was dog i was eating... six months later i still feel terrible about it
 
NATO AIR said:
i'll never be able to look my best friend brownie (my ex-g/f's dog, i miss him more than her) in the eyes... i betrayed him and his brothers.....

i was so mad when i found out it was dog i was eating... six months later i still feel terrible about it

hahaha!

Yeah, those chinese seem to love the dogs though! nasty! just look at this cutey and to think, they are eaten daily! :(


xmas_puppy.jpg
 
he's adorable... it sucks, that's one of things i miss most is being able to have a pet... its near impossible with the op tempo we have on the Kitty Hawk and CAG5 and the severe lack of freedom for the e-4 and below (e-4 myself, doesn't matter much here though)
 
NATO AIR said:
he's adorable... it sucks, that's one of things i miss most is being able to have a pet... its near impossible with the op tempo we have on the Kitty Hawk and CAG5 and the severe lack of freedom for the e-4 and below (e-4 myself, doesn't matter much here though)

I am sure that won't be forever, eventually you will be off that and be able to get yourself a pet. Just don't decide to eat it though!
:rotflmao:
 
Here in Maryland we've already had a problem with these boogers. If and when you hook one these damn things can survive out of water for an extended period of time and are so vicious that they will actually maneuver on land and come after you, scary shit.
 

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