Maryland offering $200 gift cards for dead snakehead fish
Getting paid to fish sounds like a dream come true to some. But does
it have the same appeal if you're going up against a "fish from hell"
that can travel on land and sink its teeth into a steel-toed boot?
"We do not want snakeheads in our waters," DNR Director Don Cosden tells FoxNews.com. "This initiative is a way to remind anglers that it is important to catch and remove this invasive species of fish."
The snakehead was first seen in
Maryland back in 2002, after an 18-inch adult was caught in a local
pond. But the powerful fish, which has no natural predators in the
region, is also a determined survivalist (they can survive for up to
four days on land) and has since migrated to the nearby Potomac River
and its tributaries.
It's illegal to sell snakeheads in
most U.S. states. But as I reported several years ago, federal agents
have uncovered illegal snakehead selling operations in several states,
including New York, Texas, Florida and Missouri.
"We don't expect that anglers will
eradicate the snakehead population," DNR Tidal Bass program manager Joe
Love told Fox. "We do believe this promotion and inspiration of anglers
can help control the snakehead population. The information we gain from
the Angler's Log reports are also helpful in assessing the abundance,
spread and impact of these feisty fish."
To qualify for one of the $200
gift cards and an assortment of other prizes, all you have to do is
upload a photo of yourself with a dead snakehead to the DNR's Angler's Log site. The only complicated part is actually capturing and killing one of the "fish from hell."
One photo uploaded on Thursday by
recreational angler Berry shows him with seven dead snakehead. He says
he had to shoot them with a gun. Berry wrote that the snakehead have
been noticeably devastating the local bass population. "The snakehead
are simply taking over the spawning grounds," he wrote.
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