At Sattav Consultants, we help safeguard your lake or pond from invasive species that silently disrupt natural ecosystems, degrade water quality, and outcompete native flora and fauna. Our ecological monitoring and early-intervention strategies ensure that foreign invaders are detected, controlled, and prevented from spreading. By restoring habitat balance and strengthening native biodiversity, we protect your waterbody from long-term ecological damage.
Rapidly growing weed that chokes waterways.
Disrupts native shoreline vegetation.
Damages lake beds and native fish populations.
Outcompetes indigenous fish species.
Forms dense mats affecting water flow and oxygen
Their populations boom in both natural and artificial water bodies, with stagnant, nutrient-rich water providing ideal breeding grounds. The invasive aquatic plant water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) further aids mosquito breeding by creating dense mats that slow water flow and create protected habitats for larva
We evolved from earlier industry practices of introducing invasive fish species to much more careful, ecologically sound strategies. Instead of stocking fast-breeding, non-native fish like Tilapia, Thai Magur, or Amazon Sailfin Catfish—which often destabilize the food chain, compete with native species, and degrade habitat—we now prioritize restoration rooted in ecological balance.
Our methods focus on improving water quality, enhancing natural food webs, and reintroducing native fish species such as Rohu, Catla, Mrigal, Mahseer, and local small indigenous species (SIS) that strengthen long-term biodiversity.
We also create habitat zones, vegetated buffer strips, and controlled nutrient cycles that reduce mosquito breeding and support beneficial organisms like zooplankton and native aquatic plants. This shift ensures that lake rejuvenation is not just about fish production, but about building a resilient ecosystem where every species—fish, birds, insects, and micro-fauna—can thrive sustainably.