Giant River Stingrays Found Near Thai City



Giant River Stingrays Found Near Thai City
Stefan Lovgren in Chachoengsao, Thailand
for National Geographic News

April 29, 2008

This is the seventh 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.

When anglers called that March afternoon to say they had caught a
giant freshwater stingray near this bustling Thai city, biologist Zeb
Hogan couldn't believe it.

He had just spent a week in the remote Mekong River in northern
Cambodia, searching for the ray—which might be the world's largest
freshwater fish species—to no avail.

Hogan, of the University of Nevada in Reno, is documenting the rays as
part of the Megafishes Project, an effort to document Earth's 20 or so
freshwater giants.

Hogan is also a National Geographic Society Emerging Explorer.
(National Geographic News is part of the National Geographic Society.)

Many of these behemoths, including the giant stingray, have declined
in recent years. The ray, listed as "vulnerable" on the 2007 World
Conservation Union Red List of species, has been overfished in its
Mekong River habitat, Hogan said.

But when Hogan arrived at the river that afternoon, he found that not
only had the anglers reeled in a 14-foot-long (4.3-meter-long) ray,
but that the creature had also just given birth to a dinner plate-size
baby. (See photos of the new mother and baby.)

The newborn clung to the rough skin on the back of its mother, which
was being held at the riverbank by nine handlers.

"Amazing," Hogan said. "A stingray this size giving birth before our
eyes."

(See photos of the world's "monster" fishes.)

Megafish Title

The giant freshwater stingray, also known as the freshwater whip ray,
is found in several rivers in Southeast Asia and northern Australia.

There are unverified accounts of individuals growing well over 1,000
pounds (450 kilograms) in weight and more than 20 feet (6 meters) in
length—among the largest of the approximately 200 species of rays.

To qualify as a "megafish," a species must grow to at least 6.5 feet
(2 meters) in length or 220 pounds (100 kilograms) in weight.

"It's been a goal of mine for a long time to see if these stories of
huge stingrays are really true," Hogan said.

Until now the Mekong giant catfish holds the official record as the
largest freshwater fish ever caught, with a 2005 catch in Thailand
tipping the scales at 646 pounds (293 kilograms).

Unknowns

Much is still unknown about the mammoth ray, which was only described
scientifically in 1989.

"We know almost nothing about its abundance and habitat needs, which
makes it extremely difficult to manage the species," Hogan said.

No one knows whether the species is truly a freshwater fish or if it
can also move into the ocean.

But the behavior of the ray can be gleaned just from the way it looks,
he pointed out.

"It has eyes on top, and the spiracles [breathing holes] are modified
gill slits that allow the ray to breathe as it's buried in mud."

The ray feeds on clams and crabs using jelly-filled pores that are
able to detect electrical pulses from its prey, he said.

Its barb, or stinger, located at the base of its whiplike tail, can
grow 15 inches (37.5 centimeters) long and is the largest of any
stingray's.

"The tip is sharp like an arrowhead, passes through skin easily, and
can even go through bone," Hogan said as he held the tail of the
mother ray, his face just inches from its 9-inch (22-centimeter) barb.

The barb is covered with a sheath of toxin that is injected into a
wound. In 2006 Steve Irwin, the "Crocodile Hunter," died after his
heart was fatally pierced by a barb.

In March a woman died boating in Florida after a spotted eagle ray
jumped out of the water and hit her in the head.

Hogan said those incidents were freak occurrences, and that stingrays
never purposefully attack people.

"We need to absolutely rid our minds of stingrays as dangerous
creatures and become more curious about them and protect them," he
said.

(Related: "'Crocodile Hunter' Fans May Be Revenge-Killing
Stingrays" [September 13, 2006].)

"They're incredible animals," Hogan said as he watched the giant
mother ray swim back into the river, the baby clinging to its back.

"Hooking Into a Submarine"

Despite fishing pressures in Cambodia, in the Bang Pakong River in
eastern Thailand, stingray populations appear to be healthy.

It may seem surprising that the giant creatures could thrive in an
area densely populated by people, Hogan said.

"You wouldn't expect to find tigers or wild elephants or any other
large, wild creatures in an urban environment like this," he said.

"But it's quite possible that the reason healthy populations of giant
freshwater stingray still occur is because they're so difficult to
catch."

To snag a giant ray, fishers must use live bait as big as 2.2 pounds
(1 kilogram).

When caught, a 200-pound (91-kilograms) stingray may bury itself under
200 pounds (91 kilograms) of mud, making it almost impossible for
people to lift it out of the water.

Wuttichai "Boy" Khuensuwan, co-owner of the fishing outfitter Fish
Siam, said it's like "hooking into a submarine."

There are stories of hooked stingrays dragging boats for miles up and
down the river, and even pulling boats underwater.

Earlier this spring Fish Siam anglers spent six hours—with 15 people
taking turns at one rod—to bring in a stingray in the Bang Pakong
River.

In comparison, it took fisher Niyom "Q" Phuttharaksa only about an
hour and a half to bring in the pregnant mother that Hogan examined.

Once the fish is brought to the riverbank, it is secured with a rope
or tube through its nasal cavity. The barb is immediately wrapped with
a cloth to prevent injuries.

Rick Humphreys, co-owner of Fish Siam, said he has developed a
fascination with the stingray.

"The fact that these fish are highly elusive, highly nomadic, totally
understudied, and very rarely caught just helps fuel our obsession ...
to actually see if this is the largest freshwater fish on the planet,"
he said.

On the Hunt

The day after the ray's birth, Hogan received a call from Cambodia: A
fisher named Sok Long had caught a ray in the Mekong River, purported
to be as big as the Thai 14-footer.

The biologist quickly got on a plane headed to Phnom Penh, the
Cambodian capital.

"These catches are so rare, I don't want to miss out on any of them,"
he said. "We keep getting closer to these accounts I've heard of these
unbelievably big fish.

"The more I learn about the giant freshwater stingray, the more I
believe these unbelievable stories."
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/pf/58251358.html
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