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Old 12-04-2003, 02:27 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Location: USA
'Bout as Fishy as it Gets!

I love the hours I've spent with my worm in the water. I remember every fish I ever caught (hundreds) and where I caught 'em and something else about the day it happened too!

Mostly fresh water fishing in some rivers we got around here. Caught some eels - I like them a lot. Caught some catfish too - big but not as big as the one in this story (see pic attached below, too!):

...............................................................
Trying to save a catfish as big as a bear
( 2003-12-03) (Asia Agencies)

Zeb Hogan plunges into the muddy brown waters of the Tonle Sap River and grabs hold of a 321-pound silvery giant catfish that has just slid out of a blue tarp held by several Cambodian fisherman.

"I take him by his mouth because I can hold onto him, but it doesn't hurt him," said Hogan, a researcher tracking the species, one of the world's largest and found only around here. Its vital signs are good:


The Mekong giant catfish can grow in excess of 650 pounds and nearly 10 feet. [CNN.com]
"He's breathing, he's fighting ... He's trying to get away, now he's shaking me and biting my finger."

The Mekong giant catfish -- whose Cambodian name means "the king of fish" -- is a rare find in these waters, a Mekong River tributary.

Its sharp fall in numbers -- only eight were reported caught last year, down from about 80 a decade ago -- led to its recent listing as critically endangered, and has researchers concerned about the health of the mighty Mekong.

"Here we have a species that runs a risk of being the first species in the Mekong River to go extinct," said Hogan, a researcher with the University of California at Davis.

Hogan has spent three years in Cambodia tracking the giant catfish. Fishermen alert him when one glides into their more than 328-foot-long nets trawling the river bottom, and Hogan goes out to weigh, measure, tag, collect a tissue sample and release the animal.

His goal is to see how many of these catfish are left. They were once found in Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam and perhaps Myanmar and southwest China. But today, fishing, dam building and navigation projects seem to have reduced their home waters to the mighty Mekong, which flows through the heart of Southeast Asia, and its tributaries in Cambodia, Laos and Thailand.

When the catfish was listed as endangered on the World Conservation Union's Red List of Threatened Species in 1996, not much was known about its rate of decline, said Caroline Pollock, a research scientist for the Gland, Switzerland-based organization, also known as IUCN.

More data, including Hogan's, have shown that its numbers fell by at least 80 percent over the last 13 years, a "pretty massive decline" that prompted the critically endangered classification in the group's latest list released Nov. 18, Pollock said.

The giant catfish isn't the average bottom feeder: It grows up to 660 pounds and nearly 10 feet in length -- sharing the title of largest freshwater fish with a close relative, the dog-eating catfish, according to the Guinness Book of World Records. Its only other rival in size is found in the Amazon River.

The largest catfish in Europe used to grow 16 feet long, but not anymore, and those in the United States don't get much larger than 6 feet.

The fish is well known in the Mekong countries, where some people believe fishing for it has gone on thousands of years.

In Cambodia, Buddhists pour a medicinal perfume on it to bring good luck. In Laos, legend has it that four centuries ago, the king used to sacrifice a man and woman each year to cave spirits to get their permission to catch the giant catfish.

And in Thailand, where it has been proposed as the national fish, there's a painting of it more than 3,500 years old on a riverbank cliff in the northeast.

Around the Mun River in northeastern Thailand, fishermen believe they must not catch it, and if they do, they hold a ceremony with a monk and burn a picture of it to ward off bad luck. In Baan Haad Bai on Thailand's border with Laos, fishermen pray every April to the spirit that protects the giant catfish, beseeching it to allow them to catch it.

Fish are an important source of food and income for the more than 60 million people who live in the Mekong River basin. Studies show that the annual fishery yield is as much as 1.93 million tons, worth about $1.45 billion, according to the Mekong River Commission.

Men, women and children can be spotted fishing in Cambodia's Tonle Sap, either casting nets or scooping the water with oversized butterfly- shaped sieves. Four boats mark the area where wealthier fishermen use the long nets that end up trapping the giant catfish.

Some researchers believe that the fate of this legendary fish is a sign of things to come for other denizens of the 3,032-mile Mekong River, which is home to about 1,245 species, second only to the Amazon in terms of the biodiversity of its inland waterways.

If it goes extinct, "there's something probably going on in the environment that's not healthy for fish," said Hogan, whose work includes genetics and migration patterns. "In all likelihood there'll be other species that might disappear later, or populations of species that people depend on for food that might decrease."

The river had mostly remained isolated due to wars and geography, but dams recently built along it in China and work on the upper Mekong River to clear navigation channels for large boats are threatening the catfish and other species, said Chainarong Sretthachau, director of the Southeast Asia Rivers Network.

At Khon Phi Laung, rapids near the Thai-Laos border that are in the area of the only known spawning grounds for giant catfish, villagers haven't snagged one of the species in the last three years and the overall catch has fallen as well, Chainarong said.

"The fishers are worried about their income," he said, adding that many had to stop fishing.

One Chinese dam is only about 124 miles upstream from Khon Phi Laung, and proponents of expanded commercial navigation have suggested blasting the rapids area to enlarge the river -- a move researchers say could drive the giant catfish out of the water and into the history books.

....................................

You got a fishin' story you want to share?
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Old 12-04-2003, 02:50 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Location: Where the wind comes sweeping down the plains, i.e. Oklahoma
I read that article about those catfish, those are huge.<p>I've doen a little bit of fishing as well in Colorado. Trout, river and lake fishing. Very good memories of me, my Dad, and Grandpa. The Zen of fishing.
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Old 12-04-2003, 04:22 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Interesting. Quite a dilema; fish or poeple/economy. I do doubt that this would be the "first species in the Mekong River to go extinct". Maybe go back a few thousand years...
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Old 12-04-2003, 04:32 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Location: Chapel Hill, NC
At my lake house in rural South Carolina, I have seen dead catfish around four feet long. Definitely nothing compared to that thing, but stil pretty damn big.
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Old 12-04-2003, 04:46 PM   #5 (permalink)
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Thanks for the fish article, ART.

When we were kids, a group of us used to go fishing in a little hole a few miles from where we lived.
It would take a couple hours walking just to get there.
We walked most of it on some old train tracks and had to cross a trestle bridge like the one in Stand By Me.
Luckily for us, it was a discontinued track. I took about ten minutes just to go about 50ft. across. (I couldn't not look down.)
All in all, it was a fun hike.
By the time we got there we would be ready for a swim.
I don't remember who discovered the place, but it had a perfect spot to swim in and still not disturb the fish in the main part of the pond.

While fishing, we would catch perch and catfish and if I'm not mistaken a few bass, as well.

Well, this one time we went, I caught a few nice-looking perch and one catfish about 7 or 8 inches long.

Usually we cooked what we caught when we got back home, so we put the fish on stringers to take with us.
On the way back, we were having to step over fallen limbs and other debris so naturally we were looking down and watching where we were going.
I was holding my stringer up and away to my side and had just stepped over a branch when I felt my fish flop on the line.
I looked down in time to see the catfish impale itself in my hand with one of its fins.
Only, I thought it stuck me with one of its whiskers.
To this day, that's what I see in my mind.
Logically, I know that the whiskers aren't stiff and strong enough to go through you, but it's what I recall seeing.
I guess it was the trauma of it all.
They had to tackle me on the ground to get it out of my hand, I was carrying on so.

I had to get a tetanus shot when I got home. My mom's a nurse and she's got connections.

I don't know what happened to the fish.
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Old 12-04-2003, 05:50 PM   #6 (permalink)
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Thanks for yours, Fremen!

That's the sort of thing I was lookin' for.
Yep, we eat what we catch too, usually. That includes catfish and carp - too much meat to not figure how to make 'em taste good enough to eat!

I like to make carp cakes outa carp - just like other more refined fish cakes. Nothin' like soaking in some beer either to make them fishy fish taste alright!
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