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Wels catfish

The wels catfish (/ˈwɛls/ or /ˈvɛls/; Silurus glanis), also called sheatfish or just wels,[2] is a large species of catfish native to wide areas of central, southern, and eastern Europe, in the basins of the Baltic, Black and Caspian Seas. It has been introduced to Western Europe as a prized sport fish and is now found from the United Kingdom east to Kazakhstan and China and south to Greece and Turkey.

Wels catfish
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Siluriformes
Family: Siluridae
Genus: Silurus
Species:
S. glanis
Binomial name
Silurus glanis
Range of the wels catfish. Red: native occurrence. Blue: occurrence in coastal waters. Orange: introduced

Etymology

The English common name comes from Wels, the common name of the species in German language.[2] Wels is a variation of Old High German wal, from Proto-Germanic *hwalaz – the same source as for whale – from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kʷálos ('sheatfish').

Description

The wels catfish's mouth contains lines of numerous small teeth, two long barbels on the upper jaw and four shorter barbels on the lower jaw. It has a long anal fin that extends to the caudal fin, and a small sharp dorsal fin relatively far forward. The wels relies largely on hearing and smell for hunting prey (owing to its sensitive Weberian apparatus and chemoreceptors), although like many other catfish, the species exhibits a tapetum lucidum, providing its eyes with a degree of sensitivity at night, when the species is most active. With its sharp pectoral fins, it creates an eddy to disorient its victim, which the predator sucks into its mouth and swallows whole. The skin is very slimy. Skin colour varies with environment. Clear water will give the fish a black color, while muddy water will often tend to produce green-brown specimens. The underside is always pale yellow to white in colour. Albinistic specimens are known to exist and are caught occasionally. With an elongated body-shape, wels are able to swim backwards like eels.

 
Wels catfish observed in the Dnieper River.

The female produces up to 30,000 eggs per kilogram of body weight. The male guards the nest until the brood hatches, which, depending on water temperature, can take from three to ten days. If the water level decreases too much or too fast the male has been observed to splash the eggs with its tail in order to keep them wet.[citation needed]

The wels catfish is a long-lived species, with a specimen of 70 years old having been captured during a recent study in Sweden.[3]

 

Size

With a total length possibly exceeding 3 m (9.8 ft) and a maximum weight of over 200 kg (440 lb),[4] the wels catfish is the largest freshwater fish in Europe and Western Asia (only exceeded by the anadromous beluga sturgeon). Such lengths are rare and unproven during the last century, but there is a somewhat credible report from the 19th century of a wels catfish of this size. Brehms Tierleben cites Heckl's and Kner's old reports from the Danube about specimens 3 m (9.8 ft) long and 200–250 kg (440–550 lb) in weight, and Vogt's 1894 report of a specimen caught in Lake Biel which was 2.2 m (7 ft 3 in) long and weighed 68 kg (150 lb).[5] In 1856, K. T. Kessler wrote about specimens from the Dnieper River which were over 5 m (16 ft) long and weighed up to 400 kg (880 lb).[6] (According to the Hungarian naturalist Ottó Hermann [1835-1914], catfish of 300–400 kilograms were also caught in Hungary in the old centuries from the Tisza river.)[7]

Most adult wels catfish are about 1.3–1.6 m (4 ft 3 in – 5 ft 3 in) long; fish longer than 2 m (6 ft 7 in) are a rarity. At 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in) they can weigh 15–20 kg (33–44 lb) and at 2.2 m (7 ft 3 in) they can weigh 65 kg (143 lb).

Only under exceptionally good living circumstances can the wels catfish reach lengths of more than 2 m (6 ft 7 in), as with the record wels catfish of Kiebingen (near Rottenburg, Germany), which was 2.49 m (8 ft 2 in) long and weighed 89 kg (196 lb). This giant was surpassed by some even larger specimens from Poland (2,61 m. 109 kg.), the former Soviet states (the Dnieper River in Ukraine, the Volga River in Russia and the Ili River in Kazakhstan), France, Spain (in the Ebro), Italy (in the Po, where a record 2.78m long wels catfish was caught, and Arno), Serbia (in Gruža Lake, where a 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in) long specimen weighing 117 kg (258 lb) was caught on 21 June 2018[8][9] and the Danube river, where a catfish measuring 275 cm and weighing 117 kg was caught at Đerdap gorge in the same year[10]), and Greece, where this fish was introduced a few decades ago. Greek wels grow well thanks to the mild climate, lack of competition, and good food supply.

Wels catfish have also been observed thriving in the cooling ponds of the damaged Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. Although popularly believed to have been mutated into large sizes as a result of radioactive fallout, in reality the fish are growing to such proportions due to the absence of humans, hunting and fishing having been outlawed in the exclusion zone following the accident, as well as being provided food by generous tourists visiting the area.

The largest accurate weight was 144 kg (317 lb) for a 2.78 m (9 ft 1 in) long specimen from the Po Delta in Italy.[11]

Exceptionally large specimens are rumored to attack humans in rare instances, a claim investigated by extreme angler Jeremy Wade in an episode of the Animal Planet television series River Monsters following his capture of three fish, two of about 66 kg (145 lb) and one of 74 kg (164 lb), of which two attempted to attack him following their release. A report in the Austrian newspaper Der Standard on 5 August 2009, mentions a wels catfish dragging a fisherman near Győr, Hungary, under water by his right leg after the man attempted to grab the fish in a hold. The man barely escaped with his life from the fish, which must have weighed over 100 kg (220 lb), according to him.[12]

Diet

Silurus lunging out of water to capture pigeons

Like most freshwater bottom feeders, the wels catfish lives on annelid worms, gastropods, insects, crustaceans and fish. Larger specimens have also been observed to eat frogs, snakes, rats, voles, coypu and aquatic birds such as ducks,[13] even cannibalising on other catfish. A study published by researchers at the University of Toulouse, France, in 2012[14] documented individuals of this species in an introduced environment lunging out of the water to feed on pigeons on land.[15] Out of the beaching behaviour observed and filmed in this study, 28% were successful in bird capture. Stable isotope analyses of catfish stomach contents using carbon 13 and nitrogen 15 revealed a highly variable dietary composition of terrestrial birds. This is likely the result of adapting their behaviour to forage on novel prey in response to new environments upon its introduction to the river Tarn in 1983[16] since this type of behaviour has not been reported within the native range of this species. They can also eat red worms in the fall, but only the river species.[citation needed]

The wels catfish has also been observed taking advantage of large die-offs of Asian clams to feed on the dead clams at the surface of the water during the daytime. This opportunistic feeding highlights the adaptability of the wels catfish to new food sources, since the species is mainly a nocturnal bottom-feeder.[17]

Distribution and ecology

The wels catfish lives in large, warm lakes and deep, slow-flowing rivers. It prefers to remain in sheltered locations such as holes in the riverbed, sunken trees, etc. It consumes its food in the open water or in the deep, where it can be recognized by its large mouth. Wels catfish are kept in fish ponds as food fish.

 
Wels catfish in Chernobyl are fed bread by tourists

An unusual habitat for the species exists inside the Chernobyl exclusion zone, where a small population lives in abandoned cooling ponds and channels at a close distance to the decommissioned power plant. These catfish appear healthy, and are maintaining a position as top predators in the aquatic ecosystem of the immediate area.[18]

As introduced species

There are concerns about the ecological impact of introducing the wels catfish to regions where it is not native. Following the introduction of wels catfish, populations of other fish species have undergone steep declines. Since its introduction in the Mequinenza Reservoir in 1974, it has spread to other parts of the Ebro basin, including its tributaries, especially the Segre River. Some endemic species of Iberian barbels, genus Barbus in the Cyprinidae that were once abundant, especially in the Ebro river, have disappeared due to competition with and predation by wels catfish.[citation needed] The ecology of the river has also changed, with a major growth in aquatic vegetation such as algae.

The wels catfish may have established a population in Santa Catarina, Brazil.[19] They were imported from Hungary in 1988 and were washed into the Itajaí-Açu river after a flood caused their tanks to overflow. In 2006, a specimen weighing 86 kg (189.5 lbs) and 1.85 m (6 ft) long was captured in Blumenau, suggesting the catfish have survived and possibly be reproducing.

Conservation status

Although Silurus glanis is not considered globally endangered, the conservation status varies across the species native distribution range. In the northern periphery of the distribution, the species has been declining over the last centuries and was extinct from Denmark in the 1700s and from Finland in the 1800s.[20] In Sweden it persists only in a few lakes and rivers, and is now considered as near threatened.[21] Recent genetic studies have furthermore found that the Swedish populations harbors low genetic diversity and are genetically isolated and differentiated from each other,[22][23] highlighting the need for conservation attention.

As food

Only the flesh of young wels catfish specimens is valued as food. It is palatable when the fish weighs less than 15 kg (33 lb). Larger than this size, the fish is highly fatty and additionally can be loaded with toxic contaminants through bioaccumulation due to its position at the top of the food chain. Large specimens are not recommended for consumption, but are sought out as sport fish due to their combativeness.[citation needed]

Attacks on people

 
An albino Wels catfish.

Tabloids regularly report attacks caused by various catfish that primarily affected animals (often only the role of the catfish was presumed). In April 2009, an Austrian fisherman was allegedly attacked by a catfish in one of the fishing lakes in Pér, near Győr, Hungary. However, the man reportedly managed to break free.[24]

Similar stories occur in the works of older natural history writers. Alfred Brehm (1829–1884), a German naturalist, published his famous work The World of Animals in the 19th century. It was also translated into Hungarian at the beginning of the 20th century. In this, Brehm or the compiling Hungarian scientists write the following:

"Old Gesner’s (Conrad Gessner Swiss naturalist, 1516–1565) claim that catfish doesn’t spare humans either doesn’t just belong in the realm of tales, as we know of several cases that confirm that. Thus, Heckel and Kner mention that a catfish was caught at Bratislava, in the stomach of which the remains of a child corpse were found. [...] Fishermen credible to Antipa (probably Romanian zoologist Grigore Antipa, 1866–1949) told me that children bathing in the stomachs of catfish were caught in the bones of their hands and feet. - Communicates Vutskits (probably Hungarian zoologist hu:Vutskits György, 1858–1929). - A Romanian fisherman penetrated the middle of the Danube with his boat because he wanted to take a bath. While bathing, a catfish caught his legs, which he could no longer pull out of the mouth of this big-mouthed monster, and so he got to the bottom of the water. A few days later, they came across the corpse of a dead fisherman whose legs were still in the catfish's mouth, but even the greedy robber could not release his victim's legs and drowned because of it".[25]

Related species

References

  1. ^ Freyhof, J.; Kottelat, M. (2008). "Silurus glanis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2008: e.T40713A10356149. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T40713A10356149.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b Pauly, D. (2007). Darwin's Fishes: An Encyclopedia of Ichthyology, Ecology, and Evolution. Cambridge University Press. p. 208. ISBN 978-1-139-45181-9. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  3. ^ Bergström, K., Nordahl, O., Söderling, P. et al. Exceptional longevity in northern peripheral populations of Wels catfish (Silurus glanis). Sci Rep 12, 8070 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-12165-w
  4. ^ Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2016). "Silurus glanis" in FishBase. February 2016 version.
  5. ^ Brehm, Alfred; Brehms Tierleben II - Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles 1
  6. ^ Mareš, Jaroslav; Legendární příšery a skutečná zvířata, Prague, 1993
  7. ^ Ottó Hermann: A Book of Hungarian Fishing (A magyar halászat könyve), p. 340, [1]
  8. ^ Slavica Stuparušić (22 June 2018). "Уловљен џиновски сом на Гружанском језеру" [Gigantic wels catfish caught in the Gruža Lake]. Politika (in Serbian). p. 08.
  9. ^ N.Radišić (21 June 2018). "Dolijala zver iz Gružanskog jezera: izvukli soma od 2,4 metra i 117 kilograma na tri zrna kukuruza" [The beast from the Gruža Lake came about - they caught a 2,4 m long and 117 kg heavy wels catfish]. Blic (in Serbian).
  10. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "275cm WORLD RECORD SILURO -- SPINNING - MONSTER CATFISH 275cm 117kg". YouTube.
  11. ^ Wood, Gerald C. (1982). The Guinness book of animal facts and feats. Enfield, Middlesex: Guinness Superlatives. ISBN 0-85112-235-3.
  12. ^ Der Standard, 2009-08-05. Waller-Wrestling im ungarischen Fischerteich. Retrieved 2009-08-06. (in German)
  13. ^ Slone, C. (2006). "Silurus glanis Danube catfish". Animal Diversity Web. University of Michigan, Museum of Zoology.
  14. ^ Sieczkowski, Cavan (8 December 2012). "Catfish Hunt Pigeons: Fish Catch Birds on Land in Display of Adaptive Behavior (VIDEO)". The Huffington post. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  15. ^ Cucherousset, J.; Boulêtreau, S. P.; Azémar, F. D. R.; Compin, A.; Guillaume, M.; Santoul, F. D. R. (2012). Steinke, Dirk (ed.). ""Freshwater Killer Whales": Beaching Behavior of an Alien Fish to Hunt Land Birds". PLOS ONE. 7 (12): e50840. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...750840C. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0050840. PMC 3515492. PMID 23227213.
  16. ^ Yong, Ed. "The catfish that strands itself to kill pigeons". Discover Magazine. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  17. ^ "The European catfish loves Asian clam soup | Société Française d'Ichtyologie - Cybium". sfi-cybium.fr. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  18. ^ Keartes, Sarah. "Yes, there are giant catfish in Chernobyl's cooling pond – but they're not radiation mutants". Earth Touch. Retrieved 14 April 2019.
  19. ^ Cucino, Almir; Vitule, Jean (16 May 2014). "First records of the European catfish, Silurus glanis Linnaeus, 1758 in the Americas (Brazil)". BioInvasions Records. 3 (2): 117–122. doi:10.3391/bir.2014.3.2.10 – via ResearchGate.
  20. ^ Palm, Stefan; Vinterstare, Jerker; Nathanson, Jan Eric; Triantafyllidis, Alexandros; Petersson, Erik (December 2019). "Reduced genetic diversity and low effective size in peripheral northern European catfish Silurus glanis populations". Journal of Fish Biology. 95 (6): 1407–1421. doi:10.1111/jfb.14152. ISSN 0022-1112. PMID 31597197. S2CID 204028931.
  21. ^ "Artfakta från SLU Artdatabanken". artfakta.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  22. ^ Palm, Stefan; Vinterstare, Jerker; Nathanson, Jan Eric; Triantafyllidis, Alexandros; Petersson, Erik (December 2019). "Reduced genetic diversity and low effective size in peripheral northern European catfish Silurus glanis populations". Journal of Fish Biology. 95 (6): 1407–1421. doi:10.1111/jfb.14152. ISSN 0022-1112. PMID 31597197. S2CID 204028931.
  23. ^ Jensen, Axel; Lillie, Mette; Bergström, Kristofer; Larsson, Per; Höglund, Jacob (7 May 2021). "Whole genome sequencing reveals high differentiation, low levels of genetic diversity and short runs of homozygosity among Swedish wels catfish". Heredity. 127 (1): 79–91. doi:10.1038/s41437-021-00438-5. ISSN 0018-067X. PMC 8249479. PMID 33963302.
  24. ^ Balázs, Laczó (6 July 2009). [Giant catfish attacks fisherman]. kisafold.hu (in Hungarian). Archived from the original on 27 September 2020.
  25. ^ Brehm, Alfred. "Leső harcsák (Silurus Art.)" [Catfish (Silurus Art.)]. Az Állatok Világa [The World of Animals] (in Hungarian). Retrieved 30 June 2022.

Further reading

External links

This article includes information translated out of the German and French Wikipedias.

wels, catfish, wels, catfish, silurus, glanis, also, called, sheatfish, just, wels, large, species, catfish, native, wide, areas, central, southern, eastern, europe, basins, baltic, black, caspian, seas, been, introduced, western, europe, prized, sport, fish, . The wels catfish ˈ w ɛ l s or ˈ v ɛ l s Silurus glanis also called sheatfish or just wels 2 is a large species of catfish native to wide areas of central southern and eastern Europe in the basins of the Baltic Black and Caspian Seas It has been introduced to Western Europe as a prized sport fish and is now found from the United Kingdom east to Kazakhstan and China and south to Greece and Turkey Wels catfishConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ActinopterygiiOrder SiluriformesFamily SiluridaeGenus SilurusSpecies S glanisBinomial nameSilurus glanisLinnaeus 1758Range of the wels catfish Red native occurrence Blue occurrence in coastal waters Orange introduced Contents 1 Etymology 2 Description 2 1 Size 2 2 Diet 3 Distribution and ecology 3 1 As introduced species 3 2 Conservation status 4 As food 5 Attacks on people 6 Related species 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology EditThe English common name comes from Wels the common name of the species in German language 2 Wels is a variation of Old High German wal from Proto Germanic hwalaz the same source as for whale from Proto Indo European s kʷalos sheatfish Description EditThe wels catfish s mouth contains lines of numerous small teeth two long barbels on the upper jaw and four shorter barbels on the lower jaw It has a long anal fin that extends to the caudal fin and a small sharp dorsal fin relatively far forward The wels relies largely on hearing and smell for hunting prey owing to its sensitive Weberian apparatus and chemoreceptors although like many other catfish the species exhibits a tapetum lucidum providing its eyes with a degree of sensitivity at night when the species is most active With its sharp pectoral fins it creates an eddy to disorient its victim which the predator sucks into its mouth and swallows whole The skin is very slimy Skin colour varies with environment Clear water will give the fish a black color while muddy water will often tend to produce green brown specimens The underside is always pale yellow to white in colour Albinistic specimens are known to exist and are caught occasionally With an elongated body shape wels are able to swim backwards like eels Wels catfish observed in the Dnieper River The female produces up to 30 000 eggs per kilogram of body weight The male guards the nest until the brood hatches which depending on water temperature can take from three to ten days If the water level decreases too much or too fast the male has been observed to splash the eggs with its tail in order to keep them wet citation needed The wels catfish is a long lived species with a specimen of 70 years old having been captured during a recent study in Sweden 3 Size Edit With a total length possibly exceeding 3 m 9 8 ft and a maximum weight of over 200 kg 440 lb 4 the wels catfish is the largest freshwater fish in Europe and Western Asia only exceeded by the anadromous beluga sturgeon Such lengths are rare and unproven during the last century but there is a somewhat credible report from the 19th century of a wels catfish of this size Brehms Tierleben cites Heckl s and Kner s old reports from the Danube about specimens 3 m 9 8 ft long and 200 250 kg 440 550 lb in weight and Vogt s 1894 report of a specimen caught in Lake Biel which was 2 2 m 7 ft 3 in long and weighed 68 kg 150 lb 5 In 1856 K T Kessler wrote about specimens from the Dnieper River which were over 5 m 16 ft long and weighed up to 400 kg 880 lb 6 According to the Hungarian naturalist Otto Hermann 1835 1914 catfish of 300 400 kilograms were also caught in Hungary in the old centuries from the Tisza river 7 Most adult wels catfish are about 1 3 1 6 m 4 ft 3 in 5 ft 3 in long fish longer than 2 m 6 ft 7 in are a rarity At 1 5 m 4 ft 11 in they can weigh 15 20 kg 33 44 lb and at 2 2 m 7 ft 3 in they can weigh 65 kg 143 lb Only under exceptionally good living circumstances can the wels catfish reach lengths of more than 2 m 6 ft 7 in as with the record wels catfish of Kiebingen near Rottenburg Germany which was 2 49 m 8 ft 2 in long and weighed 89 kg 196 lb This giant was surpassed by some even larger specimens from Poland 2 61 m 109 kg the former Soviet states the Dnieper River in Ukraine the Volga River in Russia and the Ili River in Kazakhstan France Spain in the Ebro Italy in the Po where a record 2 78m long wels catfish was caught and Arno Serbia in Gruza Lake where a 2 4 m 7 ft 10 in long specimen weighing 117 kg 258 lb was caught on 21 June 2018 8 9 and the Danube river where a catfish measuring 275 cm and weighing 117 kg was caught at Đerdap gorge in the same year 10 and Greece where this fish was introduced a few decades ago Greek wels grow well thanks to the mild climate lack of competition and good food supply Wels catfish have also been observed thriving in the cooling ponds of the damaged Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Although popularly believed to have been mutated into large sizes as a result of radioactive fallout in reality the fish are growing to such proportions due to the absence of humans hunting and fishing having been outlawed in the exclusion zone following the accident as well as being provided food by generous tourists visiting the area The largest accurate weight was 144 kg 317 lb for a 2 78 m 9 ft 1 in long specimen from the Po Delta in Italy 11 Exceptionally large specimens are rumored to attack humans in rare instances a claim investigated by extreme angler Jeremy Wade in an episode of the Animal Planet television series River Monsters following his capture of three fish two of about 66 kg 145 lb and one of 74 kg 164 lb of which two attempted to attack him following their release A report in the Austrian newspaper Der Standard on 5 August 2009 mentions a wels catfish dragging a fisherman near Gyor Hungary under water by his right leg after the man attempted to grab the fish in a hold The man barely escaped with his life from the fish which must have weighed over 100 kg 220 lb according to him 12 Diet Edit source source source source source source source source source source Silurus lunging out of water to capture pigeons Like most freshwater bottom feeders the wels catfish lives on annelid worms gastropods insects crustaceans and fish Larger specimens have also been observed to eat frogs snakes rats voles coypu and aquatic birds such as ducks 13 even cannibalising on other catfish A study published by researchers at the University of Toulouse France in 2012 14 documented individuals of this species in an introduced environment lunging out of the water to feed on pigeons on land 15 Out of the beaching behaviour observed and filmed in this study 28 were successful in bird capture Stable isotope analyses of catfish stomach contents using carbon 13 and nitrogen 15 revealed a highly variable dietary composition of terrestrial birds This is likely the result of adapting their behaviour to forage on novel prey in response to new environments upon its introduction to the river Tarn in 1983 16 since this type of behaviour has not been reported within the native range of this species They can also eat red worms in the fall but only the river species citation needed The wels catfish has also been observed taking advantage of large die offs of Asian clams to feed on the dead clams at the surface of the water during the daytime This opportunistic feeding highlights the adaptability of the wels catfish to new food sources since the species is mainly a nocturnal bottom feeder 17 Distribution and ecology EditThe wels catfish lives in large warm lakes and deep slow flowing rivers It prefers to remain in sheltered locations such as holes in the riverbed sunken trees etc It consumes its food in the open water or in the deep where it can be recognized by its large mouth Wels catfish are kept in fish ponds as food fish Wels catfish in Chernobyl are fed bread by tourists An unusual habitat for the species exists inside the Chernobyl exclusion zone where a small population lives in abandoned cooling ponds and channels at a close distance to the decommissioned power plant These catfish appear healthy and are maintaining a position as top predators in the aquatic ecosystem of the immediate area 18 As introduced species Edit There are concerns about the ecological impact of introducing the wels catfish to regions where it is not native Following the introduction of wels catfish populations of other fish species have undergone steep declines Since its introduction in the Mequinenza Reservoir in 1974 it has spread to other parts of the Ebro basin including its tributaries especially the Segre River Some endemic species of Iberian barbels genus Barbus in the Cyprinidae that were once abundant especially in the Ebro river have disappeared due to competition with and predation by wels catfish citation needed The ecology of the river has also changed with a major growth in aquatic vegetation such as algae The wels catfish may have established a population in Santa Catarina Brazil 19 They were imported from Hungary in 1988 and were washed into the Itajai Acu river after a flood caused their tanks to overflow In 2006 a specimen weighing 86 kg 189 5 lbs and 1 85 m 6 ft long was captured in Blumenau suggesting the catfish have survived and possibly be reproducing Conservation status Edit Although Silurus glanis is not considered globally endangered the conservation status varies across the species native distribution range In the northern periphery of the distribution the species has been declining over the last centuries and was extinct from Denmark in the 1700s and from Finland in the 1800s 20 In Sweden it persists only in a few lakes and rivers and is now considered as near threatened 21 Recent genetic studies have furthermore found that the Swedish populations harbors low genetic diversity and are genetically isolated and differentiated from each other 22 23 highlighting the need for conservation attention As food EditOnly the flesh of young wels catfish specimens is valued as food It is palatable when the fish weighs less than 15 kg 33 lb Larger than this size the fish is highly fatty and additionally can be loaded with toxic contaminants through bioaccumulation due to its position at the top of the food chain Large specimens are not recommended for consumption but are sought out as sport fish due to their combativeness citation needed Attacks on people Edit An albino Wels catfish Tabloids regularly report attacks caused by various catfish that primarily affected animals often only the role of the catfish was presumed In April 2009 an Austrian fisherman was allegedly attacked by a catfish in one of the fishing lakes in Per near Gyor Hungary However the man reportedly managed to break free 24 Similar stories occur in the works of older natural history writers Alfred Brehm 1829 1884 a German naturalist published his famous work The World of Animals in the 19th century It was also translated into Hungarian at the beginning of the 20th century In this Brehm or the compiling Hungarian scientists write the following Old Gesner s Conrad Gessner Swiss naturalist 1516 1565 claim that catfish doesn t spare humans either doesn t just belong in the realm of tales as we know of several cases that confirm that Thus Heckel and Kner mention that a catfish was caught at Bratislava in the stomach of which the remains of a child corpse were found Fishermen credible to Antipa probably Romanian zoologist Grigore Antipa 1866 1949 told me that children bathing in the stomachs of catfish were caught in the bones of their hands and feet Communicates Vutskits probably Hungarian zoologist hu Vutskits Gyorgy 1858 1929 A Romanian fisherman penetrated the middle of the Danube with his boat because he wanted to take a bath While bathing a catfish caught his legs which he could no longer pull out of the mouth of this big mouthed monster and so he got to the bottom of the water A few days later they came across the corpse of a dead fisherman whose legs were still in the catfish s mouth but even the greedy robber could not release his victim s legs and drowned because of it 25 Related species EditAristotle s catfish Silurus aristotelis from Greece the only other native European catfish species beside Silurus glanis Amur catfish Silurus asotus introduced to European rivers Giant Lake Biwa catfish Silurus biwaensis from Japan endemic to Lake Biwa Soldatov s catfish Silurus soldatovi from the Amur River RussiaReferences Edit Freyhof J Kottelat M 2008 Silurus glanis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2008 e T40713A10356149 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2008 RLTS T40713A10356149 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 a b Pauly D 2007 Darwin s Fishes An Encyclopedia of Ichthyology Ecology and Evolution Cambridge University Press p 208 ISBN 978 1 139 45181 9 Retrieved 13 January 2022 Bergstrom K Nordahl O Soderling P et al Exceptional longevity in northern peripheral populations of Wels catfish Silurus glanis Sci Rep 12 8070 2022 https doi org 10 1038 s41598 022 12165 w Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2016 Silurus glanis in FishBase February 2016 version Brehm Alfred Brehms Tierleben II Fish Amphibians Reptiles 1 Mares Jaroslav Legendarni prisery a skutecna zvirata Prague 1993 Otto Hermann A Book of Hungarian Fishing A magyar halaszat konyve p 340 1 Slavica Stuparusic 22 June 2018 Ulovљen џinovski som na Gruzhanskom јezeru Gigantic wels catfish caught in the Gruza Lake Politika in Serbian p 08 N Radisic 21 June 2018 Dolijala zver iz Gruzanskog jezera izvukli soma od 2 4 metra i 117 kilograma na tri zrna kukuruza The beast from the Gruza Lake came about they caught a 2 4 m long and 117 kg heavy wels catfish Blic in Serbian Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine 275cm WORLD RECORD SILURO SPINNING MONSTER CATFISH 275cm 117kg YouTube Wood Gerald C 1982 The Guinness book of animal facts and feats Enfield Middlesex Guinness Superlatives ISBN 0 85112 235 3 Der Standard 2009 08 05 Waller Wrestling im ungarischen Fischerteich Retrieved 2009 08 06 in German Slone C 2006 Silurus glanis Danube catfish Animal Diversity Web University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Sieczkowski Cavan 8 December 2012 Catfish Hunt Pigeons Fish Catch Birds on Land in Display of Adaptive Behavior VIDEO The Huffington post Retrieved 16 March 2017 Cucherousset J Bouletreau S P Azemar F D R Compin A Guillaume M Santoul F D R 2012 Steinke Dirk ed Freshwater Killer Whales Beaching Behavior of an Alien Fish to Hunt Land Birds PLOS ONE 7 12 e50840 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 750840C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0050840 PMC 3515492 PMID 23227213 Yong Ed The catfish that strands itself to kill pigeons Discover Magazine Retrieved 16 March 2017 The European catfish loves Asian clam soup Societe Francaise d Ichtyologie Cybium sfi cybium fr Retrieved 5 March 2021 Keartes Sarah Yes there are giant catfish in Chernobyl s cooling pond but they re not radiation mutants Earth Touch Retrieved 14 April 2019 Cucino Almir Vitule Jean 16 May 2014 First records of the European catfish Silurus glanis Linnaeus 1758 in the Americas Brazil BioInvasions Records 3 2 117 122 doi 10 3391 bir 2014 3 2 10 via ResearchGate Palm Stefan Vinterstare Jerker Nathanson Jan Eric Triantafyllidis Alexandros Petersson Erik December 2019 Reduced genetic diversity and low effective size in peripheral northern European catfish Silurus glanis populations Journal of Fish Biology 95 6 1407 1421 doi 10 1111 jfb 14152 ISSN 0022 1112 PMID 31597197 S2CID 204028931 Artfakta fran SLU Artdatabanken artfakta se in Swedish Retrieved 10 May 2021 Palm Stefan Vinterstare Jerker Nathanson Jan Eric Triantafyllidis Alexandros Petersson Erik December 2019 Reduced genetic diversity and low effective size in peripheral northern European catfish Silurus glanis populations Journal of Fish Biology 95 6 1407 1421 doi 10 1111 jfb 14152 ISSN 0022 1112 PMID 31597197 S2CID 204028931 Jensen Axel Lillie Mette Bergstrom Kristofer Larsson Per Hoglund Jacob 7 May 2021 Whole genome sequencing reveals high differentiation low levels of genetic diversity and short runs of homozygosity among Swedish wels catfish Heredity 127 1 79 91 doi 10 1038 s41437 021 00438 5 ISSN 0018 067X PMC 8249479 PMID 33963302 Balazs Laczo 6 July 2009 oriasharcsa tamadt a horgaszra Giant catfish attacks fisherman kisafold hu in Hungarian Archived from the original on 27 September 2020 Brehm Alfred Leso harcsak Silurus Art Catfish Silurus Art Az Allatok Vilaga The World of Animals in Hungarian Retrieved 30 June 2022 Further reading EditFreyhof J Kottelat M 2008 Silurus glanis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2008 e T40713A10356149 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2008 RLTS T40713A10356149 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Silurus glanis Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 19 March 2006 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Silurus glanis Wikispecies has information related to Silurus glanis This article includes information translated out of the German and French Wikipedias Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wels catfish amp oldid 1133935683, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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