Officials hope new signs will help control London's feral goldfish problem - Action News
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London

Officials hope new signs will help control London's feral goldfish problem

Conservation officials have erected new signs this spring in a number of the city's most environmentally-sensitive areas in the hopes of stopping another goldfish invasion before it begins.

As far as pets-turned-to-pests go, the innocuous-looking goldfish is among the worst

New signs such as this one at Sifton Bog have been placed in environmentally sensitive areas around the city, instructing people not to make their unwanted pets into unwanted pests.
New signs such as this one at Sifton Bog have been placed in environmentally sensitive areas around the city, instructing people not to make their unwanted pets into unwanted pests. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

Conservation officials have put up new signs in environmentally-sensitive areas around the city, instructing people not to release their unwanted goldfish into the wild,in the hopes of staving off an invasion before it happens.

London already has two notable infestations. One is in Saunders Pond, just south of Parkwood Hospital. The second is in theeast pond in the Coves where the fish can reportedly grow as large as a two-litre pop bottle.

"They are invasive species," said Brandon Williamson, a land management technician with the Upper Thames River Conservation Authority whose responsibilities include invasive species within city ponds. "If people dump them into the environment, what happens is they reproduce really quickly."

Like the goldfishitself, stories of the species' legendary reproductive powers have reproduced themselves across the country, showing how the little fish can cause big problems. From taking over storm ponds in Albertato a swimming hole in New Brunswick,feral goldfishreproduce in such large numbers and grow to such monstrous sizes, they'veclosed a lake in BC and are now believed to bethe dominant species in Hamilton Harbour.

Your mundane-looking pet fish is a monster in the making

This monster goldfish is one of thousands pulled from Hamilton Harbour every year, where the fish is believed to be the dominant species. (Fisheries and Oceans Canada)

"They can live in low oxygen water. They can live in murky water that other fish can't live in," Williamson said. "They'll eat fish eggs, they'll eat small younglings for fish, they'll also eat the vegetation our native species would feed on."

They also stir up mud, sothat when they reach large enough numbers, the goldfishcreate clouds of sediment so thick it disturbs the nesting habits of native species.

"They actually reduce the population of our native species in many different ways."

While peering at abrightly-coloured fish swimming around its ceramic castle, most goldfish ownerswouldn't know that these pet fish are potential killers.

Most people think releasing goldfishinto the wild isn't harmful

Saunders Pond, seen here, is among the bodies of water within the City of London that are infested with feral goldfish. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

The new signs were installed in places like the Sifton Bog and the Coves, Williamson said, to tell anyone thinking they'redoing the right thing by releasing Goldie into the wild, that their actions have the potential to upset their local ecosystem.

"They're not aware of the harm," he said. "It's an awareness piece to let people know that not all fish species are welcome."

"Hopefully they'll see the sign and that will trigger why they can't do this."

While predatorssuch as Northern Pike or Great Blue Herons are known to snack on goldfish, Williamson said that often the populations aren't large enough to keep up with the fecund fish, which are known to spawn like mad.

"It takes quite a heavy population of our native species to actually control them."

Once established, goldfish are 'really difficult' to remove

This image taken a decade ago shows the range of sizes of goldfish pulled from Redmond's Pond during a clean up of an infestation at the Sifton Bog. (Brandon Williamson/UTRCA)

Without predators, they become the dominant species very quickly. Williamson said it happened at Redmond's Pond a decade ago after someone introduced goldfish to the dark waters at the bog's centre. Too acidic for native species, the fish quickly multiplied and took over.

"The goldfish just thrived in that location," he said. "It's really difficult to remove them."

Williamson said to get rid of a goldfish infestation, conservation officials have to corral them into one section of the pond, where they can be netted by hand. There's also the electroshock option, which involves stunning the fish with an electrical discharge into the water and is heavily regulated by environmental legislation.

In certain cases, Williamson said, conservation officials can't do anything.

"When the water is too deep it becomes an issue and there may not be much you can do, really."