A "walking" fish that can move across dry land is threatening to make its way to Australia from Papua New Guinea and could pose a threat to local birds and marine life, scientists have warned.
The climbing perch, an invasive and exceedingly aggressive freshwater species which drags itself between waterholes, can survive for up to six days without water and has already made its way to islands off Australia.
Scientists monitoring the fish’s progress now believe it can survive in saltwater and is set to head for the Australian mainland, possibly by catching a ride in a fishing boat.
The fish was discovered on two small Australian islands in late 2005, about three to four miles south of Papua New Guinea.
“I still think the chances of it getting to Australia by swimming are quite low,” said Dr Nathan Waltham from James Cook University.
“There is more chance it will arrive in the bottom of a fishing boat or as discarded live-bait fish.”
The climbing perch, or Anabas testudineus, has tended to overpower native species in new environments and can hibernate in the mud of dry creek beds for up to six months.
It is able to destroy larger creatures by swelling up after being swallowed to block the predator’s throat, thereby choking adversaries or forcing them to starve.
“It does seem to be able to handle a little bit of salt,” Dr Waltham said. “In our trip up there in December we found it in some hyper saline water holes, so there is some ability to resist exposure.”
In the past 30 to 40 years, the climbing perch has spread across Indonesia and Papua New Guinea.
Scientists have been working with local communities on small islands north of Australia to assist with preventing it from further advancing.
Herbert Warusam, a ranger on Saibai Island, a Torres Strait island north of Queensland, said: “We are now actively monitoring climbing perch in our wetlands and educating local fisherman to report sightings. It is important we don’t let them travel beyond our Island.”
Just what Australia needs
Just what Australia needs
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Just what Australia needs
"Holy walking catfish Batman. The cane toads are going to become gigantic eating those!"
Yrs,
Rubato
Yrs,
Rubato
Re: Just what Australia needs
The way the article is written, it seems like they are talking about one individual fish.
Re: Just what Australia needs
One's more than enough.
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: Just what Australia needs
Maybe, but usually you need at least two. 
Re: Just what Australia needs
That fish looks tired....


Re: Just what Australia needs
One pregnant female will do.Big RR wrote:Maybe, but usually you need at least two.
yrs,
rubato
- MajGenl.Meade
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Re: Just what Australia needs
At least it will raise the average IQ
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts
Re: Just what Australia needs
that perch looks parched. does a climbing perch climb up and perch on something/ the parched perch perched
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Re: Just what Australia needs
It might perch on a porch? (Or in a fancier neighborhood...on a Porsche, perchance?)
People who are wrong are just as sure they're right as people who are right. The only difference is, they're wrong.
— God @The Tweet of God
— God @The Tweet of God
Re: Just what Australia needs
the parched perch perched on the porch and pleaded..., perchance may I purchase a Perrier ?
his thirst quenched, he pooped on my Porsche and paddled away...
his thirst quenched, he pooped on my Porsche and paddled away...
Re: Just what Australia needs
True, but somehow I doubt a fish ready to deliver eggs/young would leave the aquatic environment in search of new ponds, lest it deliver on the land.rubato wrote:One pregnant female will do.Big RR wrote:Maybe, but usually you need at least two.
yrs,
rubato
Re: Just what Australia needs
ther is at least one fish that can turn itself into a female and get themselves pregnant if necessary. it has also been discovered that some lizard fems can get themselves pregnant, have all male babies and wait for them to grow up, then make more babies, male and female....
Re: Just what Australia needs
That's true as well; it even happened to a dinosaur in Jurassic Park.
But it would be a lot easier to start with two fish, a male and a female in a pond. Even the ark took animals by twos.
But it would be a lot easier to start with two fish, a male and a female in a pond. Even the ark took animals by twos.
Re: Just what Australia needs
well I m not a Jurassic park fan, or a movie fan at all really, but holly is, and she wants to see Jurassic World badly. cripes. I did catch the lord of the rings and the hobbit!
I m a big Ent fan...
I m such the opposite of the placid ents that I can t help but admire them.... and they kick ass when you push them too far!
eta- I didn t get the lizard info from Jurassic park, by the way
I m a big Ent fan...
I m such the opposite of the placid ents that I can t help but admire them.... and they kick ass when you push them too far!
eta- I didn t get the lizard info from Jurassic park, by the way
Re: Just what Australia needs
I didn't mean to insinuate that's where you got your information.