A new peer-reviewed study by researchers at the University of Toledo and the University of Missouri finds that when goldfish are released into the wild or escape, they can have major impacts on freshwater ecosystems.
Published in animal ecology journalthis study provides some of the strongest experimental evidence to date that invasive goldfish can dramatically alter lake environments. The findings raise important warnings for pet owners, natural resource managers, and policy makers. Goldfish are common household pets, but outside the aquarium they can pose a serious ecological threat.
“It is critically important to inform the public that pets can become pests that harm freshwater ecosystems. The evidence is now clear. Releasing goldfish into the wild may seem like an act of kindness, but it can turn into a serious ecological threat,” said William Hintz, Ph.D., principal investigator of the study and associate professor in UTledo’s Department of Environmental Sciences and Lake Erie Center.
Goldfish cause major changes in lake ecosystems
The study, titled “Exotic goldfish induces a regime shift in an experimental lake ecosystem of varying trophic status,” used large outdoor freshwater mesocosmos designed to mimic real-world lake conditions. Researchers introduced goldfish (Carassius auratus) into an experimental ecosystem and monitored how the goldfish affected different types of lakes over time.
The research team investigated two common freshwater conditions: oligotrophic (oligotrophic) water and nutrient-rich (eutrophic) water. In both environments, goldfish caused significant ecological damage.
Among the most important discoveries are:
- Water quality deteriorated rapidly. In nutrient-rich systems, goldfish caused a rapid decrease in water clarity and a sharp increase in suspended particles. This indicates that there has been a major change in ecosystem conditions.
- Native aquatic species have declined. Populations of snails, amphipods, and zooplankton have declined significantly. These small organisms play an important role in healthy freshwater food webs and have been affected by both predation and habitat disturbance.
- Native fish were negatively affected. Goldfish competed with native fish for food and other resources, reducing the general health of native fish species. Scientists consider this an important indicator of long-term population health.
- Both types of lakes were vulnerable. The specific effects differ between nutrient-poor and nutrient-rich systems, but goldfish can be harmed in either system. This result suggests that freshwater ecosystems are not fully protected from these impacts.
Direct evidence of goldfish
The researchers used both additive and alternative experimental designs to distinguish between the effects of goldfish and the effects associated with keeping more fish overall.
Their analysis found that while some changes in aquatic vegetation were related to total fish abundance, the most severe ecological damage was directly related to the presence of goldfish.
The study also documented what scientists call a “regime shift,” a point at which an ecosystem crosses a threshold and rapidly reorganizes into a fundamentally different, often degraded, state. Once these changes occur, it can be very difficult and expensive to restore the ecosystem.
Why is goldfish stocking a problem?
Goldfish are one of the most widely distributed aquarium fish in the world, and the global pet trade continues to move aquatic species across continents at unprecedented levels.
When goldfish are released into ponds, rivers, or lakes or escape during floods, invasive populations can form and spread quickly.
“When goldfish are released into the wild, they rapidly grow into very large fish, disrupting lake sediments, preying on large amounts of prey, and competing with native fish,” said Rick Reilly, a professor in the University of Missouri’s College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources, director of Mizzou’s Johnny Morris Institute for Fisheries, Wetlands and Aquatic Systems, and co-author of the study.
Call for prevention and public awareness
Researchers say goldfish should be treated as a high-priority invasive species. They recommend that natural resource officials focus on prevention, early detection, and control efforts before wild populations become established.
The authors also highlight the need for stronger public education efforts to help pet owners understand the environmental impacts of releasing aquarium animals into natural waterways.
People who no longer want their goldfish are encouraged to pursue alternatives, such as returning the fish to a pet store, finding another aquarium owner willing to adopt it, or contacting local wildlife authorities for guidance.
About research
The study, “Invasive goldfish induce regime shifts in experimental lake ecosystems of varying trophic status,” was authored by Dr. William Hintz, Dr. Hannah Barrett of the University of Toledo, and Dr. Rick Lelier of the University of Missouri.
The researchers conducted their study using an outdoor freshwater mesocosm designed to recreate realistic lake conditions. This study combined additive and alternative experimental approaches across oligotrophic (nutrient-poor) and eutrophic (nutrient-rich) nutritional states to assess the effects of goldfish (Carassius auratus) on water quality, phytoplankton, invertebrate communities, filamentous algae, and native fish status.

