Caught a piranha in a small pond in northern California

mizzike

Active member
Alright so me and my friend were out fishing tonight at a small secluded pond near my house in northern california. I've been to this pond probably 10 times and caught many small bass fishing there and had never encountered anything out of the ordinary until tonight..

To access the pond you have to park your car on the side of a busy highway and then walk a few hundred yards down a wide trail. We like to bring a canoe along so we can get to all of the good fishing spots quickly.

Tonight we rolled up to the pond around 7 o'clock and immediately saw something strange in the water. At first it seemed like there was an otter or seal swimming in slow circles on its back, but after a closer look it turned out to be a strange fish swimming on its side with its mouth out of the water. We figured that it would be better to just leave it alone because it was peak fishing time and we didn't want to miss out.

After 2 solid hours of fishing we finally call it a night and head back to shore. By this time it's getting dark and we forgot our flashlights so we don't really want to waste too much time. But as we get near to shore we spot the fish again doing the exact same thing, and now that the fishing is over, our curiosity gets the better of us and we decide to try and catch it. We thought since it was acting strangely that it was probably dying and catching it would be easy. We were wrong. After missing it with our hands and bashing its head with our paddles repeatedly we still couldn't land the fish so we had to get creative. While i got the boat close, my friend got his paddle under the fish and then launched it into the middle of the boat. Then all hell broke loose. The fish flipped out and stared thrashing violently sending tackle and empty arizona cans flying. The act of flinging the fish also brought a ton of water along with it and to make things worse the fish started bleeding profusely. I had to pin it with my foot so that we could get it back to shore before it jumped out of the boat. Finally we get back to shore but the fish is still raging. I managed to kill it with a rock after a few minutes and after we got all the bloody muddy water out of the boat, brought it back to my house for further examination.

At first we thought it was a piranha but it had blunt teeth and that would have been absurd so we Googled "freshwater fish in north america" thinking that we would find a match for sure. After scanning through about 50 images and finding no convincing matches we were confused. From all the pictures we had ever seen of piranha it really looked like we had caught one. So we investigated and it turns out that the fish we caught was an exact match to a vegetarian species of piranha found the the amazon called the Pacu Piranha. I'll let the pictures prove the rest but yeah...

We think that someone had been keeping it in an aquarium but it had grown too large and they had tried to ditch it in the pond. But because it had lived all its life in a tank it was having a hard to acclimating to the new environment and that would explain the way it was acting. I'm gonna call fish and game in the morning and see what they say and hopefully get a legit confirmation that it is indeed a piranha. But i think this is a pretty epic fishing story and i thought since i had nothing better to do with my night i would share it with ns!

oh yeah, pictures.

photo.php


What we managed to catch

pacu_and_piranha.jpg


What we found on google images for Pacu Piranha

See the resemblance?

****SPARKNOTES****

Went fishing in a california pond and found a piranha
 
Probably this, species relocation by ships does happen, but a lot less often with real fish, it happens more with algae, jellyfish, barnacles, crabs, etc...
My bet is the aquarium, these pacus are often sold in aquarium stores where people are not aware of the requirements. they are normally herbivores, but when they get frustrated or not enough food, they will also eat meat, and other fish....+they grow, a lot, 2ft in captivity happens!
so often a family has bought a new aquarium, lets say 80l tank, then they come to the shop, looking for some nice fish and they see these small pirhanas, not much bigger then a lightbulb and they think they're so cool and probably won't grow any more, so they take one! some months later the pacu has grown, it can hardly fit in the tank any more, its stressed because it isn't a solitary fish, so he attacks other fish. People get tired and angry at the fish and decide to dump him in a pond/lake or river....
ps normally seen you'd need at least 300l tank for a pacu, and you need to get more then one...
 
yeah, probaably that, the argument about species relocation doesnt happen in small secluded ponds either....or maybe it fell down from an airliner...
 
Saw a documentary about Snakeheads (it's a fish from china or india i dont remember) that were released into lakes and rivers near maryland and some other places and have been decimating everything that lives in them because they're insane preditors, made me think of this
 
Yeah, what a dick.
In other news, my brother caught a seagull once, completley by accident, he casted and and it snagged the bastard.
 
last night, a squril was getting in the bird seeds my grandpa puts out for birds, and i grabed my air rifle just sniped the squril ;)

i felt very very bad
 
gotta hope that was the only one and it was just from an aquarium. Invacive species can kill whole ecosystems
 
holyshit! mike thats straight wild, quite the shocker for nor cal
when i was a youngster same shit happened in the bahamas, caught a barracuda, reeled it in, and it was thrashing shit up on the boat.
makes me feel better when we eat these things..
 
no, i didn't read the last paragraph. sorry. and the guy above is right, the biggest things usuall associated with species relocation are barnacles and shrimp.
 
Yeah so i just got off the phone with fish and game. They said that this happens quite a bit and aren't all that surprised. They were impressed with how large it was though, and are coming to pick its body up next week.
 
claim! -> i'm at work and i literally just found 3 abandoned kittens under a shed. they came out to see what i was and they started chewing on rocks. seeing as how i cannot allow kittens to chew on rocks i crushed up my leftover burger from lunch and they are happily chowing down on some beef right now.
 
we had hermit crabs in like gr.4 and they always ended up killing themselves. i remember one dug under a rock and got crushed and one climbed up the glass wall and fell off
 
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