About The Fishes in This Location
Toman (Channa Micropeltes)
The most attractive game fish among anglers is Toman (snakehead). Normally two hooks of fishing rods and casting is widely used for catching them. For the bait, Lampan Sungai or other carps or frogs are their attraction. Due to their aggressive behavior two hooks are used because they tends to struggle strongly to make themselves free. Hence, their big size, it is able to make them free if one hook is practiced. Among fishermen, they use long lines with two inch hooks or bigger. By using Lampan Sungai or other carps as bait the line will hung slightly submerged.
TOMAN - SNAKEHEADS Family : Channidae Genus : Channa Size : up to a metre in the wild Temperament : Very aggressive/predacious Distribution : Asia & South East Asia
Snakeheads - A common food fish in parts of Asia and a very fierce predator in the wild. It's known as snakehead due to the resemblance of its head to a snake. Snakeheads are freshwater fish from the genus Channa. The more popularly known species are the Toman (Giant snakehead) and the Haruan (Common snakehead). Both are considered food fish and can be bought from wet markets.
Juveniles swim in schools, but adults are solitary or occur in pairs. They build bubble nests, and are the top predators in many freshwater lakes in the region. They feed on almost anything - smaller fish, frogs, baby turtles and even baby ducks. The snakehead is tolerant of anaerobic conditions because it is endowed with an air breathing apparatus. Their air breathing capabilities allow them to 'walk' on land from one body of water to another by lateral undulations of their body. The fish can live in waters having pH values of 4 to 9 and can survive the drought season in low oxygen content muddy waters. The snakeheads settle in the mud of drying bodies of water and continue to burrow deeper as the drying continues. Here the fish can survive without water for several months in a torbid state, subsisting on atmospheric oxygen and stored fat until the rain returns.
Here's a brief summary of the two most common Snakeheads :-
Common Name(s) : Giant snakehead, red snakehead, Toman Sc. Name : Channa Micropeltes Habitat : It inhabits rivers, canals, lakes, ponds, swamps, marshes, padi fields, mining pools and road side ditches. It becomes the top predator in these waters. Water : 6.0-7.2 Temperature : 73- 80 °F Size : up to 1 metres / 36 inches. Diet : Live food, beef heart, worms, meaty foods. Breeding : Channas are nest-brooding species. The nest is prepared by the parent fish who bite off the aquatic vegetation over a roundish area in shallow water near the shore. The snakehead can breed when it is 9 months old, at a total length of about 21 cm. After the eggs are laid, they float and form a thin film at the surface. Generally, the male parent guards the nest during the incubation period which lasts 3 days. Attitude : Aggressive. Best kept with larger or similar size fishes. Description : The Toman is the largest of all Snakehead species in the world. They can grow to a length of about 1 metres and is an extremely tough and hardy predator. It is also considered to be one of the best fighting fresh water fish by local anglers. This quality, coupled with its good tasting flesh, makes the Toman one of the most sought after game fish in Singapore and Malaysia.
Haruan (Channa Striatus)
The most common sought after game fish among anglers. Normally a sigle hook with live bait (frog) casting is widely used for catching them. For the bait, live frogs, caterpillars, lizards are their attraction. Usually the hook is hidden within the bait. The techniques is to cats and retrieve the bait slowly along weeds and grassy areas, the techniques is not to get snagged along the way - that is why the hook is hidden in the bait itself.
Common Name(s) : Common snakehead, stripped snakehead, Haruan Sc. Name : Channa Striatus Habitat : It inhabits rivers, canals, lakes, ponds, swamps, marshes, paddi fields, mining pools and even damps. Water : 5.5-7.5 Temperature : 71- 82 °F Size : up to 45 centimetres / 18 inches. Diet : Live food like small fishes. A natural predator in its habitat. Attitude : Aggressive. Best kept with larger or similar size fishes. Description : Unlike its cousin the Toman, the Haruan is an indigenous species. Adults are smaller than Tomans and can reach lengths of about 45 centimetre. Common in forested and rural streams as well as canals and reservoirs, the Aruan is often seen sold in markets. The local Chinese community, considered its flesh to posses certain medicinal values which are supposedly good for the healing of wounds.
Tapah (Wallago attu )
Caution - These fish are very aggressive with very sharp teeth and must be handled with extreme caution
The Tapah as it is known in its native land is a large catfish. Once reaching over 6 feet, this catfish is now found in much smaller sizes. The natives fear it because of its known habit of eating small ducks, dogs, and small children. It is thought the Tapah became this agressive due to natives laying to rest their dead in the water. The catfish would then see this as a ready supply of food. Conditioned feeding of human corpses over the centuries created a fish that has a taste for humans!
The locals says that these fish sometime feed on monkeys as the reach down for a drink of the river. These fish when caught will try to bite - gloves and long nose pliers must be used to remove hooks.
Fishing these fish requires lines between 25 to 35 lb breaking strain. Hooks require wire trace to prevent their sharp serrated teeth from cutting your line. Method of fishing is the same as for the Toman.
Here is some technical information:
Distribution : Asia: Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, the Malay Peninsula and Indonesia. Reported from Laos (Ref. 9497).
Biology : Found in large rivers, lakes and tanks. A large, voracious and predatory catfish which thrives in heels with grassy margin. Associated with deep, still or slow-flowing water with a mud or silt substrate (Ref. 6028). Sluggish and stays on muddy or silty bottom in search of food. Juveniles feed mainly on insects; adults on smaller fish, crustaceans, and molluscs. Abundant during the warm season; a premonsoon summer breeder. Destructive to other more valuable food-fishes. Bites strongly if handled, with its huge mouth, formidable jaws, and band of conical teeth.
Max. size : 240.0 cm TL Environment : demersal, freshwater, brackish Climate Zone : tropical; 22 - 25°C; 38°N - 10°S
The upper teeth and lower measure 4 mm in length. As seen on these images, the teeth point toward's the back of the throat. Inside, on either side of tongue are additional teeth which point forward. |