Invasive blackchin tilapia devastates Thailand's river ecosystems and livelihoods
Invasive blackchin tilapia has devastated Thailand's river ecosystems and fishers' livelihoods since its introduction in 2011. Local farmer Wallop Khunjaen lost a million baby shrimp to the voracious fish, prompting increased control measures. Experts warn eradication is unlikely, urging sustainable solutions like utilizing blackchin tilapia for fish products or animal.
How does this story land?
Summary by OZbrief Editorial · The Guardian Australia · Source
Take it further — get the full app and never miss a moment of what's happening in Australia.
This publisher's site can't be shown here due to their security settings.
Open full article →No source link available for this article.
Published 05 Jul 2026, 04:00 UTC · Updated 05 Jul 2026, 06:10 UTC
Summary by OZbrief Editorial. Original report: The Guardian Australia. Editorial policy · Corrections
Trending
- Eminem loses trademark battle, Australian brand Swim Shady secures victory
- Watch: PM's former top aide on Starmer's first call with Trump
- Fogarty kicks four as Crows bounce back to beat Eagles
- We spent the morning at Brisbane’s loneliest train station
- Gas giants to reap $18 billion war windfall, reviving export tax calls
- Sydney brothers accused of stealing $600,000 from elderly man with dementia



