March 15, 2026
Nature Done Wright
Incorporating the Celery Farm and Screech Owl Companion blogs
Monday Morning Mystery Solved — Amazing
On Monday, I asked readers what the American Bittern is eating in Walt Staab's amazing photos from last weekend. (Thanks, Walt!)
Readers all thought it was an eel. I thought it was a Mudpuppy.
I asked the experts.
Fish expert Bob Schmidt writes:
This is NOT an American eel. Eels have a continuous dorsal and anal fin.
Your photos show a fish that has no visible anal fin and a small discrete dorsal.
Also note the spotting on the caudal fin.
This is an Oriental Weatherfish, an exotic species that I have seen and published on in the Hudson Valley. You may want to contact NJ Fish and Game, they may not know that this species is in your area.
Most environmental agencies are concerned with the spread of this species, but data showing environmental damage is sparse.
In the study we did (published in Northeastern Naturalist, available from my ResearchGate page), weatherfish inhabited deep silty backwaters where almost no other fish were found. They feed on all kinds of invertebrates at night.
Also Bob Schmidt writes::
I contacted NJ Fish and Game.
The agency's Principal Fisheries Biologist, Mark Boriek sent me several helpful websites on NJ's invasive fish species and said that the Oriental Weatherfish is on the state watchlist of invasive fish:
NJDF&W has documented them in White's Pond, Waldwick; an unnamed tributary of the Saddle River, Saddle River and in the Raritan River drainage.
Mark also gave me a webpage where you can get more info: here.
Lorrimer Snctuary's Patrick Scheuer adds:
I found one back in 2007 in the smaller pond at the CF.
I knew it wasn't a native so I brought it back to Lorrimer and looked it up.
I sent a report to NJ Fish and Game and they confirmed the ID. That one is no longer alive.
Since then my students and I have been finding lots of them in several places–White's Pond, Ridgewood Duck Pond.
Any we find are brought back to Lorrimer and put in our big aquarium where they become food for the sunny and catfish.
A few years ago some biologists came to the center a took a bunch to preserve are type specimens for their collection.
(Thanks, Bob, Mark and Patrick!)
5 comments
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How big will they Be? Are they edible?
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Glad you spotted it
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Great photos & information!
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Wow! Invasive plants and now invasive fish. Shows the importance of constant stewardship.
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Wow






5 comments
Rochana
How big will they Be? Are they edible?
Sally
Glad you spotted it
Alice L
Great photos & information!
Joe K
Wow! Invasive plants and now invasive fish. Shows the importance of constant stewardship.
Mary
Wow