Local Pacu make headlines....

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CFLfish

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Hey guys, just thought I share this little piece of local news with ya.
http://www.floridatoday.com/article/20100120/NEWS01/1200333
Link^

-BY JIM WAYMER • FLORIDA TODAY • January 20 said:
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MERRITT ISLAND — They hand-fed Jaws from their pond-side home for three decades.Friends, relatives and neighborhoods on Pine Boulevard knew of the hulking fish that lurked there. They grew to love it.
Jaws grew to a plump 60 pounds, on a diet of bread, pretzels, hotdogs, hamburgers -- you name it. They would mimic the "Jaws" movie riff as the chubby fish approached their back deck, glaring glossy white teeth that looked almost human. Jaws was a charmer. "He would actually smile at me," said Regina ***dos, 50. "He's a big, fat fish with this little face and this little mouth." On Monday night, Jaws floated up, presumably a victim of the recent cold snap, old age or both. Jaws came to dominate the ***doses' post-meal fish and turtle feeding frenzies off their back deck.
"He used to come and look me right in the eye and play games with me with the food," ***dos said. "He would push all the other turtles and fish out of the way to get the bread." The ***doses were never sure, but believed Jaws to be a freshwater buffalo fish. Jon Shenker, a biologist at Florida Tech, said Tuesday he believed Jaws was a South American pacu, an aquarium fish often let go in the wild. The ***doses say Jaws had been in the 240-square-foot pond since Regina's father, Craig Karrer, built the home in 1981. The fish was already more than a foot long back then, Karrer said. When he died, he was about three feet long. "People used to come from all over to see that fish," Karrer said. Children in the neighborhood would fish the pond, but Jaws was never fooled. Pacu can grow to more than 80 pounds. A member of the same family of fish as piranha, they are usually solitary, but vegetarian and less aggressive than their man-eating cousin. They're common to flooded forests, where they chomp down on fruits and nuts that fall from trees. "Those jaws can crunch up hard nuts with ease," Shenker said via e-mail. But Jaws seemed more lover than killer. The ***doses could practically pet him. "He had a personality," said Lee Ann Fiegle, Kerrer's daughter who also fed and grew attached to Jaws.
Biologists don't want them in Florida, but the fish seem not to have spread much. “So far we don’t know of any breeding populations,” said Bob Wattendorf, a biologist with Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. “It’s one we really don’t want to get established.”
They can live more than three decades. Igor, a pacu in an aquarium at a state laboratory in Boca Raton named for its injured face, was already about 10 pounds when Wattendorf started working there 30 years ago. Igor’s still kicking. “It’s often misidentified as a piranha,” Wattendorf said of the species. “Pacu has very human-looking teeth with like molars in the back that’s more suited to its vegetarian diet.” A taxidermist will pull those teeth and use some of Jaws’ other real parts for a mounting. Regina ***dos said Brown’s Taxidermy in Cape Canaveral agreed to give a deal on mounting Jaws because they cared so much about the fish. They haven’t yet decided where Jaw’s final resting place will be back at home.
“He’s like family,” she said. “My heart’s broken. . . . He’s never going to come up again.”
 
Wow, nice size and age!
 
aww that video made me sad...thnx cam for the video link
 
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