Invasive pet fish banned to protect habitats


THE country will ban four species of predatory ornamental fish including Piranhas that have escaped into rivers and lakes, devastating native species and threatening fragile freshwater ecosystems, the fisheries minister said.

“We want to protect our inland water bodies from invasive species,” Ramalingam Chandrasekar said, adding it was aimed at protecting the livelihoods of fishermen on the island nation.

The import, sale and transportation of Redline Snakehead, Knife Fish, Alligator Gar and Piranha, imported from South-East Asia, will be banned from Saturday, the minister said in a statement.

Snakeheads, which can grow to one metre, were rapidly multiplying in a lake in the northwestern part of the island, threatening the native species.

Officials believe they may have been released into the Deduru Oya lake by owners who could no longer care for them.

Sri Lankans are not used to consuming Snakehead fish.

The fisheries ministry has organised a competition for anglers to catch Snakeheads, coinciding with the ban on Saturday. — AFP

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

‘Return to India or we will not hear you’: Bombay High Court rebukes Vijay Mallya for seeking relief while abroad
Singapore's Budget 2026: 10 highlights from PM Wong’s speech
National security, defence among key matters discussed at 271st Conference of Rulers
MyDigital ID targets 17 million registered accounts by end-2026
Thailand's Bhumjaithai Party taps Anutin, Chaichanok to lead coalition talks
Dr Wee questions GST rejection as SST adopts similar mechanisms
Two million Malaysians redeemed RM100 Sara aid within a day
Australia to send special envoy to Laos over 2024 methanol poisoning deaths
Singapore tightens enforcement at Woodlands checkpoint from Friday (Feb 13)
Japan's US$550-billion promise to Trump

Others Also Read