For many pond owners our fish have become amazing pets and companions. You have dozens of fish that you’ve spent years raising into beautiful, beloved pets. They take treats out of your hand, and everyone who visits can’t wait to check out your finned friends.
Then you walk past the pond and notice something strange – the fish are gone. All of them, seemingly overnight, gone without a trace…
As the initial shock begins to wear off your first instinct is to report the theft to the local police department. Someone stole my fish. But you soon realize that is very unlikely. It must have been something else … it probably was a mink!
Neogale vison - The American Mink
Mink belong to the same diverse family of carnivorous mammals, including weasels, badgers, and otters. Mink are found in all 67 counties in Pennsylvania.
In the wild, mink love living near the water. While their diet is diverse, their favorite cuisine seems to be fish and other aquatic life. They are also known to go after chickens and their eggs.
Mink prey on fish and other aquatic life, small mammals, birds, and eggs; adults may eat young mink
Minks typically breed in late winter, raising their kits through the Spring and Summer.
As Fall begins to roll, around the young kits are now mature enough to leave their childhood home and strike out to claim a new territory for themselves. Later Fall and into early winter is when we tend to see these newly independent solitary young adults searching for new interesting dining locations…
Mink and Ecosystem Ponds
The truth is a Splash Ecosystem pond is a very suitable habitat for these mink, plenty of water for swimming, beaches for sunning themselves, and of course easy hunting grounds for a hungry mink.
A single American Mink can easily clean out a pond with one hundred koi (or more) in just one night! These fuzzy otter-like mammals may have cute faces, but they have voracious appetites. After napping in their den during the day they typically hunt under the cover of darkness.
Upon discovering an abundant food source they will typically catch one fish at a time and stash the fish at a safe spot near the den until the hunting spot has been depleted.
How to Protect your Koi from Mink
Well, this all sounds pretty devastating, is there anything that can be done to protect my finned friends in Early Winter from these ferocious fiends?
We have quite a few tools in our toolbox to deal with some of the more common pond fish predators – like heron and other winged wranglers. These solutions are typically no match for the wily weasel, we are talking about here. They will simply tear the netting, and are not deterred by reflective balls, or floating faux alligators.
Mink are smart agile hunters with excellent underwater vision. If we can take away their sight we might stand a chance. Fortunately, we don’t need to sew little blindfolds we can simply dye the water.
If only one or two fish are missing from your pond, it is unlikely to be a mink. You are probably being visited by a Heron. Keep reading below to learn more about the big beautiful winged pesky predators …
3 Ways to Protect Fish from other Predators
Pond owners usually find out they have a predator problem in one of three ways.
The most common one is fish simply disappearing. They can’t walk out of the pond, so the next best guess is a hungry critter on the prowl. Other pond owners actually see herons or other prey staking out their pond, while others find the remains of dead fish in their yards. (A heron will pick up and kill large koi, even if they end up being too big to eat!).
So what do you do if you find yourself in one of these situations? We recommend trying one of the following solutions:
1. Floating Decoys & Deterrents
Herons aren’t as bird-brained as we like to think.
Decoy herons are probably the best-selling predator deterrents on the market. Herons are solitary predators, and, the logic goes, will avoid a pond another bird has already claimed as its own.
But we’ll let you in on a secret: Heron decoys don’t work. At least not very well.
Herons are smart animals, and they’ll figure out pretty quickly that the bird staring at them from the edge of your pond isn’t moving. That’s why we prefer decoys that float in the pond. These kinds of deterrents move with the flow of the water, creating the illusion of a living animal.
Our go-to decoys include floating swans and floating alligators. (Even if you live in a northern state, herons know not to mess with alligators because they encounter them during migration). We have also had luck with Heron Stop Reflectors: shiny, floating balls painted with large eye patterns.
If you do want to try your lucky with a heron decoy (or even a painted yard flamingo), moving the decoy to a different spot by your pond every couple days will probably give you the best results. Some people similarly find success with rubber snakes that they move around their ponds. Still, herons are intelligent birds, and your attempts to trick them probably won’t work for very long.
2. Fish Caves & Plant Cover
Fish in the wild depend on their camouflage to avoid predators. Not so for the orange and yellow koi in your pond.
The combination of brightly colored fish and shallow water in most backyard ponds make them the perfect all-you-can-eat buffets for predators. A few fish caves will help your fish hide, despite the brightly colored targets on their scales.
Fish caves are underwater structures that give your finned friends a place to hang out when predators loom overhead. They can be built into the pond, or they can be purchased and placed into existing ponds.
Plants that cover the surface of the pond can also give fish a place to hide. Waterlilies, water hyacinths and water lettuce all make great surface cover. In addition to shielding your finned friends from predators, these plants will provide much-welcomed shade on hot days, beautify the pond and help remove algae-feeding nutrients from the water.
(Most aquatic foliage will die back in the winter, so even if you have plenty of plants during the warm months, you’ll still need fish caves to keep fish safe in colder weather.)
3. Pond Netting
Sometimes a net is the only way to keep a particularly stubborn (and hungry) heron away from your fish. We uslaly go to netting as a last resort, though, because it obstructs the view of the pond.
The best way to install netting is to start with a dome-shaped frame placed over the pond (we like to use PVC electrical conduit from the hardware store). Make the dome high enough to cover any tall plants that you don’t want to trim back. Next, take your netting and place it over the dome, securing it in place with zip ties. Remember to buy enough netting to account for the height of the frame.
(In addition to deterring birds, netting is also helpful in the fall for keeping leaves out of your pond. Learn more here.)
What about Fishing Line?
While we can sometimes deter herons with a strategic criss-cross of wires over the pond, simply stringing some fishing line across the water won’t cut it. As the video above shows, herons are too smart for that. They’ll just step right over and proceed with their dinner.
Fun Facts about Herons
It’s good to know your enemy. Great Blue Herons are actually pretty interesting creatures, once you look past their fish-stealing tendencies:
- The Great Blue Heron is federally protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918. This statute makes it illegal to “pursue, hunt, take, capture, kill or sell” herons and nearly 1,100 other species of birds, unless you receive a waiver.
- If there’s a heron in your yard, you won’t miss it. These lanky birds stand 3 to 4 feet tall and can have a wingspan of more than 6 feet.
- These big birds only weigh 5 to 6 pounds, thanks to their hollow bones and thin build.
- Herons are not bright blue like a Blue Jay, but rather a bluish gray with a bright orange beak.
- Herons don’t dive for their prey. Instead, they use their long legs to wade into the water, where they stand completely still to wait for fish. When they see one, they use their long necks to quickly propel their sharp beaks forward and spear it.
- Herons live along rivers, shorelines and backyard ponds throughout much of the United States and parts of Central America and Canada. One subspecies that appears primarily in Florida is pure white instead of the more common bluish gray.
- Herons can hunt during the day and night thanks to special receptors in their eyes that help with night vision.
- Herons spend about 90 percent of their waking hours on the hunt.
- You can identify an in-flight heron by the S-shape it bends its neck into. This flying habit differentiates heron from the similar-looking crane, which flies with its necks outstretched.