Vancouver Sun

Canadian officials work to thwart potential ‘fishzilla’ invasion

- DOUGLAS QUAN

With razor- sharp teeth and dark, slimy skin, snakehead fish imported from Asia make for some pretty exotic pets. And some foodies say their tender, white flesh make for some tasty filets.

But if they are ever released into the Canadian wild and start reproducin­g, experts warn, the predatory fish — which have been dubbed the “fish from hell” and “fishzilla” — could wreak havoc on our lakes and waterways, destroying native plants and fish population­s.

It’s why environmen­t, fisheries and law enforcemen­t officials are ramping up efforts to prevent the import and sale of these and other invasive fish species.

“This is high on the radar screen for concern,” said Becky Cudmore, a senior science adviser on aquatic invasive species with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. “We want to remain on the front end of an invasion. We want to prevent them from reaching Canadian waters.”

A Toronto- area pet shop owner this month was fined tens of thousands of dollars — even ordered to spend 60 days in jail — following a joint U. S.Canada investigat­ion, dubbed “Operation Serpent,” into the illegal export and sale of snakeheads from Ontario into New York state.

Ontario banned the sale and possession of snakeheads and other fish species several years ago.

Officials with the environmen­t ministry in B. C., where informal surveys have found snakeheads for sale at some pet stores and food markets, say they are working on adopting similar regulation­s.

“Considerin­g the potential danger they pose to local ecosystems it remains our priority to institute a regulatory ban as soon as possible,” said ministry spokesman Stuart Bertrand.

The province was spurred into action after a half- metre long blotched snakehead was captured this spring in a pond at Burnaby’s Central Park and euthanized.

Meanwhile, at the federal level, officials are working on amending the Fisheries Act to include a ban on the import and inter- provincial transport of “high- risk” invasive fish species, such as the snakehead.

And the Canada Border Services Agency, which published a fact sheet last month calling the import of invasive fish species an “emerging threat,” has stepped up its vigilance at border crossings. In January and February alone, more than 23,000 pounds of live Asian carp, another invasive fish species, were seized at the Windsor, Ont., border.

South of the border, where reproducin­g snakehead population­s have been found in Maryland and Florida, invasive fish species are a growing concern.

“When they become establishe­d in larger river systems and larger bodies of water they are extremely aggressive fish, a voracious predator,” said Neil Mendelsohn, acting special agent in charge of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s northeast region.

Mendelsohn led a team of investigat­ors in an undercover sting operation targeting the Toronto- area pet shop owner.

Judges on both sides of the border ordered the store and its owner, Jim Ip, to pay more than $ 90,000 in fines for violating federal and provincial regulation­s. Ip was also sentenced in Canada to two 60- day jail terms.

 ??  ?? Simon Fraser University biology grad student Michael Beakes is seen earlier this year with a snakehead fish caught in a lagoon at Burnaby’s Central Park. It’s known as the ‘ fish from hell.’
Simon Fraser University biology grad student Michael Beakes is seen earlier this year with a snakehead fish caught in a lagoon at Burnaby’s Central Park. It’s known as the ‘ fish from hell.’

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