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Megafishes Project to Size Up Real "Loch Ness Monsters"

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Christiana Hanaman
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« on: October 14, 2011, 10:36:41 pm »

Megafishes Project to Size Up Real "Loch Ness Monsters"
Stefan Lovgren in Sandouping, China
for National Geographic News
July 24, 2007

This is the first in a continuing series on the Megafishes Project. Join National Geographic News on the trail with project leader Zeb Hogan as he tracks down the world's largest freshwater fishes.

A thick, polluting haze envelops the Three Gorges Dam, blurring the view of the world's largest hydroelectric station.



But for Zeb Hogan, a fisheries biologist with the University of Reno, in Nevada, seeing the 1.5-mile-wide (2.5-kilometer-wide) dam from the banks of the Yangtze River brings into sharp focus the threats facing the animals he has set out to study: the world's largest freshwater fishes.

"From the point of view of the fish, there's nothing worse than a dam," he said.

"Dams block upstream migration, destroy spawning habitat, and can turn large stretches of river into ecological wastelands."

Earlier this year Hogan launched the Megafishes Project, a three-year effort funded by the National Geographic Society to document the 20-some species of giant fish found around the world. (National Geographic News is owned by the National Geographic Society.)

Megafishes live in rivers and lakes and grow to at least 6.5 feet (2 meters) in length or 220 pounds (100 kilograms) in weight.

Hogan calls the giant fish "the real-life Loch Ness monsters and Bigfoots of the aquatic world." (See photos of the "monster" fishes.)

Hogan's mission has brought him to the Yangtze River, home to the Chinese sturgeon and Chinese paddlefish—ancient leviathans that were once plentiful in the world's third-longest river but are now on the brink of extinction (see China map).

The Chinese paddlefish, which can grow to be 23 feet (7 meters) long and weigh 1,100 pounds (500 kilograms), may be the largest freshwater fish in the world.

But no one has seen one in the Yangtze since 2003.

"Everywhere around the world these large fish are in big trouble," said Hogan, who is a National Geographic Emerging Explorer.

"In many places they're now so rare that the opportunity for documentation and study may soon be lost."



River Titans, Half-Ton Stingrays

The troubled story of the world's giant freshwater fish underlines the environmental crisis facing many rivers and lakes, Hogan said.

The world's fresh waters are experiencing declines in biodiversity far greater than those seen in the oceans or on land, he pointed out.

Although rivers and lakes only make up about 0.01 percent of Earth's water, about 8 percent of all species and 40 percent of global fish diversity are found there.

But more than a fifth of the world's known freshwater fish species have become extinct or gravely threatened in recent years, Hogan said.

"The conservation of freshwater biodiversity traditionally receives low priority, partially because people think of fish as food, not as wild animals," he said.

Focusing the conservation effort on the largest fish makes sense to Ian Harrison, a fish biologist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.

"In terms of helping people to understand the special importance or uniqueness of a region, it is usually easiest to identify some flagship species that capture people's attention," Harrison said.

Among these unusual animals are the arapaima, a 15-foot (4.5-meter) titan found in the Amazon River in Brazil, and the giant freshwater stingray, which may grow to more than a half ton and lives in the Mekong River in southeast Asia (see a map of the Mekong River).

"But the project isn't just about finding the world's largest fish," Hogan said.

"It's about healthy aquatic habitats, clean drinking water, living rivers. These are things that we all rely on every day."

Overfishing

Devin Bartley is a fisheries specialist with the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome, Italy.

"Megafish are good indicators of the health of a river," he said, "because they are often the first to be overfished or suffer from habitat degradation."

The threats facing large-bodied fish are vast, including pollution, increased boat traffic, habitat fragmentation from dams, climate change, and invasive species.

Many of the huge fish take years to mature, making them particularly vulnerable to environmental threats.

And in contrast to the giant animals found in the seas, river giants often live close to dense human populations.

On the Yangtze, which sees the most cargo ship traffic of any river in the world, some ten Chinese sturgeon are killed or seriously injured by boat propellers every year.

"Compounding the problem is the [inadequate] system of governance for many inland waters," Bartley said.

"Many of the world's large rivers cross one or more national borders, but fish or pollution don't respect these borders, so actions in one part of the river affect fish elsewhere."

Much of Hogan's work has focused on Southeast Asia's Mekong River, where overfishing represents the most serious concern.

The river is home to the critically endangered Mekong giant catfish, which can tip the scales at more than 660 pounds (300 kilograms).

(See photos of the Mekong giant catfish.)

Fishers along the Mekong once hauled in hundreds of giant catfish every year. Last year, only one was caught.

Race Against Time

Nancy Knowlton is director of the Center for Marine Biology and Conservation at the University of California, San Diego. She said one of the most immediate threats facing megafishes is that they're so poorly understood.

"In the ocean we have already lost most of the apex predators and other large fish, but at least their plight has received a lot of attention," Knowlton said.

"These freshwater giants are even more threatened because of their much narrower ranges and because we know so little about them, making them much harder to protect.

"Megafish in the ocean are known to play crucial ecological roles, but we have no idea of what the ecological consequences might be for rivers and lakes that are missing these giants," she added.

Hogan said more attention is now being focused on the plight of large freshwater fish, but he recognizes there are still challenges ahead.

"Due to the precarious state of populations of large freshwater fish, this new project is a race against the clock," he said.

"We must identify and protect these aquatic giants before they are gone forever."

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Christiana Hanaman
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« Reply #1 on: October 14, 2011, 10:38:26 pm »

Photo Gallery: Bear-Size Catfish, Half-Ton Stingrays Among World's ''Monster'' Fishes



July 24, 2007—Biologist Zeb Hogan holds a taimen, a giant member of the salmon family, while searching for "megafishes" in Mongolia.

Hogan leads the newly launched Megafishes Project, the first major effort to document, study, and protect the world's largest freshwater fish.

The project aims to better conservation of megafishes—species that grow to at least six feet (two meters) and weigh more than 200 pounds (90 kilograms). They include the mammoth taimen, catfish the size of bears, and half-ton river stingrays.

Hogan, a National Geographic Emerging Explorer. calls the giant fish "the real-life Loch Ness monsters and Bigfoots of the aquatic world." (The Megafishes Project is funded by the National Geographic Society, which operates National Geographic News.)

Many megafish species are endangered due to a variety of threats, including overfishing, pollution, habitat destruction, and dams, which interrupt their migration routes, Hogan said.

The largest migratory fish are usually the first to disappear from an ecosystem, Hogan added.

"Freshwater biodiversity conservation—including protection of animals like trout, catfish, sturgeon—is every bit as important as protection of animals like tigers and whales—perhaps more so," Hogan said.

Hogan's survey will cover 14 lake and river systems on six continents over the next three years.


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« Reply #2 on: October 14, 2011, 10:39:57 pm »



Name: Mekong giant catfish (Pangasianodon gigas)

Maximum Size: 118 inches (300 centimeters), 661.4 pounds (300 kilograms)

Habitat: Mekong River Basin, Southeast Asia

Endangered Status on the World Conservation Union (IUCN) Red List (2006): Critically endangered

Population Size: Unknown; only one was captured in 2006, according to Megafishes Project leader Zeb Hogan

Major Threats: Overfishing and habitat loss
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« Reply #3 on: October 14, 2011, 10:40:55 pm »



Name: Mississippi paddlefish (Polyodon spathula)

Maximum Size: 87 inches (221 centimeters) including paddle

Habitat: Mississippi River Basin, North America

Endangered Status on IUCN Red List (2006): Vulnerable

Population Size: Estimated at 1,353, based on a 2001 study by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Geological Survey

Major Threats: Overfishing, habitat loss, and pollution
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« Reply #4 on: October 14, 2011, 10:41:28 pm »



Name: Wels catfish (Silurus glanis)

Maximum Size: 197 inches (500 centimeters), 675 pounds (306 kilograms)

Habitat: Widespread in Europe and Asia

Endangered Status on IUCN Red List (2006): Least concern

Population Size: Unknown

Major Threats: N/A
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« Reply #5 on: October 14, 2011, 10:42:14 pm »



Name: Alligator gar (Atractosteus spatula)

Maximum Size: 120 inches (305 centimeters), 300 pounds (136 kilograms)

Habitat: Mississippi River Basin, North America

Endangered Status on IUCN Red List (2006): Not evaluated

Population Size: Unknown

Major Threats: Unknown
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« Reply #6 on: October 14, 2011, 10:42:52 pm »



Name: Nile perch (Lates niloticus)

Maximum Size: 79 inches (200 centimeters), 441 pounds (200 kilograms)

Habitat: Nile River Basin, Africa

Endangered Status on IUCN Red List (2006): Not evaluated

Population Size: Unknown but rapidly declining. Total amount fished fell from 1.29 million tons in 2001 to 820,000 tons in 2006, according to a National Geographic News report

Major Threats: Overfishing
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« Reply #7 on: October 14, 2011, 10:43:21 pm »



Name: Giant freshwater stingray (Himantura chaophraya)

Maximum Size: 197 inches (500 centimeters), 1,323 pounds (600 kilograms), body diameter 95 inches (240 centimeters)

Habitat: Mekong River Basin, Southeast Asia

Endangered Status on IUCN Red List (2006): Vulnerable

Population Size: Unknown

Major Threats: Overfishing and pollution
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« Reply #8 on: October 14, 2011, 10:43:57 pm »



Name: Arapaima (Arapaima gigas)

Maximum Size: 177 inches (450 centimeters), 441 pounds (200 kilograms)

Habitat: Amazon River Basin, South America

Endangered Status on IUCN Red List (2006): Data deficient

Population Size: Approximately 150,000, based on a 2004 study published in the journal Animal Conservation

Major Threats: Overfishing
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« Reply #9 on: October 14, 2011, 10:44:28 pm »



Name: Murray cod (Maccullochella peelii peelii)

Maximum Size: 79 inches (200 centimeters), 250 pounds (113.5 kilograms)

Habitat: Murray River Basin, Australia

Endangered Status on IUCN Red List (2006): Endangered

Population Size: Unknown

Major Threats: Overfishing and habitat loss
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« Reply #10 on: October 14, 2011, 10:44:59 pm »



Name: Giant barb (Catlocarpio siamensis)

Maximum Size: 118 inches (300 centimeters), 661.5 pounds (300 kilograms)

Habitat: Mekong River Basin, Southeast Asia

Endangered Status on IUCN Red List (2006): Not evaluated

Population Size: Unknown; only ten caught in 2000, according to the Mekong River Commission

Major Threats: Overfishing and habitat loss
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« Reply #11 on: October 14, 2011, 10:45:24 pm »

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/07/photogalleries/giant-fishes/photo10.html
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