76°F
weather icon Clear

Officials nets nothing in search for piranha

If there are piranha lurking in the ponds of Boulder City, they are wily.

After the carcass of what appeared to be a piranha was found last week on the shoreline of a pond at Veterans Memorial Park, state wildlife officials set nets to see if they could catch any of the South American flesh-eating fish.

“We put out four nets, two in each pond, and found nothing,” Department of Wildlife spokesman Doug Nielsen said Friday. “Obviously, if somebody does catch another one, we’d like to have them give us a call. Bring it in to us or take photos, but don’t release it.”

Authorities were alerted to the possible presence of piranha in the ponds by a local resident’s Facebook post earlier showing the head of a sharp-toothed fish that Nielsen said looks like a piranha.

He said Department of Wildlife biologists can’t be certain without conducting a flesh test on the fish, however, and none is planned.

Nielsen said the decomposed fish head is probably another case of “aquarium dumping” or experimentation by “bucket biologists,” who put non-native fish in Nevada’s ponds and lakes.

The result is often disastrous for native species.

That was the case about 15 years ago when someone released Northern pike in Comins Lake, southeast of Ely, that “destroyed a world-class trout fishery,” Nielsen said.

Nielsen said anyone with information about piranha sightings, aquarium dumping or illegal transplanting of non-native fish should call the Department of Wildlife’s hotline at 1-800-992-3030.

Contact Keith Rogers at krogers@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0308. Find @KeithRogers2 on Twitter.

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Preservation Day: A step back in time

Dozens of people had an opportunity to journey back in time and get an inside look into Boulder City’s past as part of Saturday’s annual Historic Preservation Day.

Jenas-Keogh paces girls on track

Putting their best foot forward, Boulder City High School track and field will be well respected at the 3A state meet, qualifying 12 girls and nine boys after this past week’s regional meet.

McClarens lead swimmers to title

Continuing their illustrious pedigree of excellence, Boulder City High School boys and girls swimming each took home 3A regional championships this past weekend.

Eagles finish as top seed from south

Making a return trip to the state tournament, Boulder City High School baseball enters as the top seed out of the south.

Grace Christian Academy set to close after 26 years

For a little more than a quarter century, Grace Christian Academy has offered an alternative to elementary education in Boulder City. But as of the end of this month, its doors will be closed.

That’s good; no, that’s bad

Have you ever noticed how life can feel perfectly calm, and then suddenly everything hits at once? The calm before the storm is a real phenomenon in nature. The atmosphere often becomes extra still and quiet just before a raging storm breaks. And then, when it finally rains, it often pours, as the saying goes.

Garrett excels in classroom, field, stage

Garrett Junior High School has been very busy this quarter. Across campus, classrooms are wrapping up their final projects and concluding MAP testing to bring us into the final few days of the school year.

Something new is afloat in Boulder City

Last week, city staff took the Municipal Pool bubble down for the last time.

Data centers still a hot topic

It’s one of the most discussed topics around town these days: that being the proposed data center in Eldorado Valley, nearly three miles from the nearest residence in Boulder City.