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for National Geographic News
November 14, 2007This is the fourth story 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.
Hucho taimen may be known to the Chinese as "the river god's daughter," but in this remote corner of northern Mongolia, the world's largest trout has long been king
The taimen, the only fish species from the salmon and trout family large enough to qualify as a megafish, has already been harvested to the brink of extinction in neighboring China. Its numbers are also shrinking rapidly in Russia.
Mongolia's pristine Eg-Uur river basin now remains one of the last strongholds of healthy taimen populations.
A main reason is that Mongolians are traditionally nomadic herders who don't fish. But that could soon change.
"We're seeing a cultural shift in Mongolia with Western-style outdoor adventure and recreational fishing becoming more popular," said Brant Allen, a researcher with the University of California Davis, and a member of the taimen science team.
"There is evidence that poaching of the taimen is increasing," he said.
Vulnerable Prey
In their four years of studying the taimen, the scientists have tagged about 400 specimens to learn more about the fish's migrations patterns and population.
The scientists estimate that the population in their study area is about 2,000 catchable-size fish, which is defined as 26 inches (66 centimeters) or longer.
Radio and acoustic tagging also show that the fish are prone to stay in one place, though when they do move they can travel as much as 50 miles (80 kilometers) from their home.
"The fact that they have a predictable home territory makes them vulnerable to harvest, because people will know where to go to hunt for big fish," Hogan said.
"eople see large fish in one spot, then return to that area again and again, harvesting every fish."
Cannibal Fish
The cannibalistic instincts of taimen became apparent when Allen, the UC Davis researcher, recently examined a 32-inch-long (81-centimeter-long) taimen he had just caught at a bend in the Eg.
"It has a really large bite mark on him," Allen said, pointing to a wound below the fish's dorsal fin.
"They exhibit quite a bit of stress when they're fighting on the line, and another fish probably saw that as a weakness and came up and just bit him."
But the taimen doesn't just eat its own kind. It also consumes a range of mammals—rats, ducks, even bats—that may be unfortunate enough to end up in the water.
They have also been seen hunting in packs, earning them the nickname "river wolves."
A ferocious and even cannibalistic predator (cannibalism photo), taimen can grow more than six feet (up to two meters) in length and can weigh up to 200 pounds (91 kilograms).
But like many other freshwater giants around the world, the taimen is now threatened with extinction.
Scientists last month wrapped up a four-year study of the fish in a 60-mile (100-kilometer) stretch of the Eg and Uur rivers.
Their results show that the taimen, also known as the giant Eurasian trout, is now too rare to support sustained commercial or recreational harvest.
"This fish is not like other trout and salmon species," said Zeb Hogan, a fisheries biologist with the University of Reno in Nevada.
Waist-deep in the clear, fast-moving waters of the Eg, Hogan prepared to release a newly tagged, 44-inch-long (112-centimeter-long) taimen back into the river.
The fish, which takes up to nine years to fully mature, can live for 50 years, said Hogan, who is a National Geographic Society Emerging Explorer. (National Geographic News is owned by the National Geographic Society.)
"We only see a few animals this size per mile in the river, so if you remove one of them, it's going to take a long time before it can be replaced," he said.
Last Stronghold
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 freshwater fish found around the world.
The project looks at fish that are at least 6.5 feet (2 meters) in length or 220 pounds (100 kilograms) in weight.
But 70 percent of such species are threatened with extinction as a result of habitat destruction, overfishing, and pollution, Hogan said.
The taimen, the only fish species from the salmon and trout family large enough to qualify as a megafish, has already been harvested to the brink of extinction in neighboring China. Its numbers are also shrinking rapidly in Russia.
Mongolia's pristine Eg-Uur river basin now remains one of the last strongholds of healthy taimen populations.
A main reason is that Mongolians are traditionally nomadic herders who don't fish. But that could soon change.
"We're seeing a cultural shift in Mongolia with Western-style outdoor adventure and recreational fishing becoming more popular," said Brant Allen, a researcher with the University of California Davis, and a member of the taimen science team.
"There is evidence that poaching of the taimen is increasing," he said.
Vulnerable Prey
In their four years of studying the taimen, the scientists have tagged about 400 specimens to learn more about the fish's migrations patterns and population.
The scientists estimate that the population in their study area is about 2,000 catchable-size fish, which is defined as 26 inches (66 centimeters) or longer.
Radio and acoustic tagging also show that the fish are prone to stay in one place, though when they do move they can travel as much as 50 miles (80 kilometers) from their home.
"The fact that they have a predictable home territory makes them vulnerable to harvest, because people will know where to go to hunt for big fish," Hogan said.
"eople see large fish in one spot, then return to that area again and again, harvesting every fish."
Cannibal Fish
The cannibalistic instincts of taimen became apparent when Allen, the UC Davis researcher, recently examined a 32-inch-long (81-centimeter-long) taimen he had just caught at a bend in the Eg.
"It has a really large bite mark on him," Allen said, pointing to a wound below the fish's dorsal fin.
"They exhibit quite a bit of stress when they're fighting on the line, and another fish probably saw that as a weakness and came up and just bit him."
But the taimen doesn't just eat its own kind. It also consumes a range of mammals—rats, ducks, even bats—that may be unfortunate enough to end up in the water.
They have also been seen hunting in packs, earning them the nickname "river wolves." |
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