SAMUT SONGKRAM, Thailand(AP)
Rushing across a temple parking lot, British angler Rick
Humphreys yells, "We've got a fish."
He jumps into a small motorboat on the Maeklong River in time to
see Wirat Moungnum bring the prize to the surface _ a rare, giant
freshwater stingray that weighs as much as 44 pounds.
It bursts through the murky water exposing a soft, white
underbelly the size of a trash can lid. The crew scrambles to
string a rope through its gill-like slits and wrap a towel around
its 5-foot-long tail that has a venomous barb.
"It's a start," Humphreys says almost
apologetically. The specimen is a tenth of the size of the largest
rays. "There are a lot bigger ones than that."
Humphreys is serving as a guide for American biologist Zeb
Hogan, who is on a worldwide quest for the largest freshwater
fish.
Hogan, 34, has heard the stories of Cambodian fishermen catching
rays that weighed over 1,100 pounds with wingspans of 14 feet. But
so far, they are just stories. If he can confirm them, he could
eclipse the world record now held by the Mekong giant catfish.
"It could be the largest fish in the world and we know next
to nothing about it," Hogan says. "I've spent five
years on the Mekong looking for rays and only saw two or three.
They were nowhere near the size I'd heard about."
Hogan's quest is part of the Megafishes project financed by
the National Geographic Society.
The three-year project, which started in 2006, aims to document
and protect freshwater giants that weigh at least 200 pounds or
measure 6 feet long. The project will take Hogan to 14 freshwater
systems on six continents, including the Mekong, Nile, Mississippi
and Amazon rivers.
Time is running out for many of the species. The Chinese paddle
fish and the dog-eating catfish in Southeast Asia are on the brink
of extinction because of pollution, overfishing and dam building.
In the Yangtze, where the Three Gorges Dam is a serious threat,
Chinese paddle fish haven't been caught since 2003.
"Of the two dozen or so species of giant fish, about 70
percent are threatened with extinction," says Hogan, an
assistant research professor at the University of Nevada-Reno.
Hogan dresses like a tourist with a baseball cap and shorts and
has the boyish enthusiasm of an explorer. He spends much of the
year searching for these large fish.
So far, he has focused mostly on Asia, where he once traveled 36
hours by road to catch the taimen in Mongolia. He just returned
from Bhutan, where he scoured the river canyons for mahseer, which
can only be caught by the country's monarch.
Hogan said he was drawn to the freshwater ray, known
scientifically as Himantura chaophraya, because so little is known
about it.
Listed as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation
of Nature, it is believed to be found in rivers from Thailand to
northern Australia. Scientists only discovered it 18 years ago, and
its population is unknown.
"I have so many questions about this stingray," Hogan
says. "Is it truly a freshwater species? Where does it breed?
What are its migratory patterns?"
Hogan spent the past few years on the Mekong in a futile effort
to catch rays, because the nets of Cambodian fishermen were no
match for them. Rays also are nearly impossible to spot, since they
spend much of their time scrounging for small fish, shrimp, crabs
and mollusks that live on the bottom of these muddy rivers.
A few months ago, Hogan got wind of big rays being caught and
released by Humphreys' company FishSiam in Thailand. Unlike the
Cambodian fishermen, FishSiam uses modern rods and reels used to
catch other big game fish. At first he was skeptical, then
excited.
Humphreys seems an unlikely partner in Hogan's quest. With
his beady eyes and bald head, Hogan looks the part of bouncer, and
his thick Cockney accent can be hard to understand. He has no
scientific training.
But he knows how to fish, and his team's success in catching
stingrays is almost unmatched in Thailand. Just in the past year,
Humphreys and his partner, Wuttichai Khuensuwan, have caught 40
rays on the Ban Pakong and Maeklong Rivers, the largest weighing in
at 485 pounds.
Humphreys, who got his start catching carp in West London gravel
pits, says he prefers stingrays because of their fight. They
routinely break fishing lines, he says, and one took 15 of his men
about six hours to bring to the surface.
"Their strength is legendary," he says. "When you
see them in the flesh, it is quite humbling."
Catching a ray can be dangerous, he says, especially before its
tail has been neutralized. "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin
was killed by a stingray barb in 2006, and a Florida man was
critically injured that same year when struck in the chest by a
ray's barb.
Wuttichai Kuachareonsri, a member of Humphreys' crew,
stopped fishing for a year after he was stung in the leg by a ray
barb. "I never have felt pain like that," he says.
"It really frightened me."
On his fishing trip with Hogan, Humphreys boasts about
"monsters" below the tranquil river and insists it is a
matter of time before his team lands a world record ray.
The anglers head to the Ban Pakong and Maeklong rivers just two
hours outside Bangkok, winding their way past office towers,
Buddhist temples and busy highways. Fish farming pens dot the
riverbanks and sounds of construction and puttering boats echo
across the water.
Both spots have given up rays in the past. But on the their
first day on the Ban Pakong, the fishermen come up empty. Humphreys
blames the heavy rains that have swollen the river.
The next day, they have better luck on the Maeklong.
The rod bends almost into the water, and Wirat struggles for
almost a half hour as the ray dives under the boat and across the
bow.
It finally is brought to the surface, revealing its big bulging
eyes and dark, coarse skin. Its tail alone is 12 feet long.
Hogan says catching such a big ray so close to a big city is a
sign the species is thriving despite pollution. He is awaiting
government permission to launch a two-year study to catch and tag
20 or 30 more rays to better understand their movements.
With that data, Hogan is hoping to do what he has done for the
Mekong giant catfish, once almost fished to extinction. Hogan's
work helped establish its endangered status and prompted
authorities in Laos and Thailand to limit total catches to four a
year.
WWF freshwater biologist Chavalit Vidthayanon, who discovered a
smaller ray species in Thailand four years ago, agreed more
research was needed to better understand the health of the big
fish.
"We need to know its exact population and habitat so we can
work on conservation and find ways to better protect them," he
said.
For the easygoing Hogan, the research could help end what has
become an epic journey to find "the king of the
river."
"We're getting close to the record and I'm very
confident that a fish of record size existed," he says.
"The question is whether it still exists."
___
On the Net:
WWF:
http://www.worldwildlife.org/science/projects/giantFish.cfm
National Geographic:
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/field/projects/megafishes.html
IUCN:
http://www.iucn.org
FishSiam:
http://www.fishsiam.com
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