PestSmart: Tilapia
Tilapia (Tilapia mariae and Oreochromis mossambicus)
The black mangrove cichlid or ‘spotted tilapia’ (Tilapia mariae) and the Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) were illegally introduced into Australian waterways during the 1970s. Both species have become well established in the relatively short time since their introduction.
At first they were probably released as unwanted aquarium fish, and Mozambique tilapia are now established in catchments in tropical and subtropical Australia while black mangrove cichlids are mostly restricted to northeast Queensland. Both tilapia species are declared invasive pests in most Australian states. The rapid rate at which both species are spreading, together with evidence from overseas studies, suggests that they will have harmful impacts in Australia.
Images: Department of Employment, Economic Development and Innovation (DEEDI), Queensland
Tilapia PestSmart Toolkit documents:
- PestSmart Factsheet: Black mangrove cichlid (Tilapia mariae) [390kb PDF]
- PestSmart Factsheet: Mozambique tilapia distribution in Australia [470kb PDF]
- PestSmart Factsheet: Biology and ecology of Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) [350kb PDF]
- PestSmart Factsheet: Impacts of introduced tilapia — Australia and overseas [270kb PDF]
- Report: Tilapia in Australia
Detection and Prevention:
- PestSmart technical report: Management of freshwater fish incursions – a review
- PestSmart technical report: Towards a national emergency response system for freshwater fish incursions
- Decision support tool for the management of freshwater fish incursions: free tool to assist managers maximize the speed of response to an incursion once this has been confirmed.
Management and control:
- PestSmart Factsheet: Use of chemicals as poisons for pest fish control
- PestSmart Factsheet: Containment as a method for pest fish control
- PestSmart Factsheet: the importance of public consultation for pest fish management
Contributors: PestSmart Toolkit for Tilapia
Fiona Small, John Russell, Paul Thuesen, Trent Power – DEEDI, Queensland
Kylie Hall, Wayne Fulton – Invasive Animals CRC
