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Girl, 11, Catches Piranha Relative in Oklahoma

Invasive species bit her grandmother
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jul 26, 2018 1:15 AM CDT
Girl, 11, Catches Piranha Relative in Oklahoma
In this photo provided by the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Services, Kennedy Smith, of Lindsay, Okla, holds her catch.   (Tyler Howser/Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Services via AP)

An 11-year-old girl has quite the fish tale: A rare pacu with human-like teeth chomped down on the worm at the end of her line while she was fishing with her grandparents and brother in an Oklahoma lake. But Kennedy Smith isn't exaggerating when she describes her catch, the AP reports. Caddo County Game Warden Tyler Howser confirms that the fish was a pacu, a relative of the piranha that is native to South America and can grow up to 50 pounds. Kennedy's fish weighed about 1 pound, according to Howser and Kennedy's grandmother, Sandra Whaley.

Kennedy says she initially was "really excited" to have caught a fish Sunday in Fort Cob Lake, about 55 miles southwest of Oklahoma City. She was shocked when the fish bit her grandmother as Whaley removed the hook from its mouth. "I was confused because I knew that fish with teeth are not normal," she says. "It was weird. They were human-like and that made it even weirder." Howser said the fish was likely purchased as a pet and was released into the lake when it grew too large for the aquarium of the family that owned it. Pacu are considered an invasive species, so the fish Kennedy caught was taken by the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation and destroyed.

(More pacu stories.)

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