A small child fishing fish very large 21 kg
The youngest world's angler. Kain is 5 years old today. He has been fishing 2 years already. He caught several good size of Giant catfish in chiang mai northern Thailand. 13 kg 15 kg. 17.5 kg and he created his new record by catching 21 kgs Giant catfish.
In chiang mai northern Thailand, Kain has been fishing around with parent on boat for lure fishing. He caught Giant snakehead and Jungle perch with his top water lure
In chiang mai northern Thailand, Kain has been fishing around with parent on boat for lure fishing. He caught Giant snakehead and Jungle perch with his top water lure
Freshwater Killer Whales' - Catfish Hunt on Land
Freshwater Killer Whales' - Catfish Hunt on Land
The invasive European catfish has learned to grab tasty pigeons from the shore, stranding themselves on the beach for precious seconds as they nab their prey, the scientific journal PLoS ONE reported on December 5.
On a small gravel island in the middle of the River Tarn winding through the city of Albi, in southwestern France, pigeons gather to clean and bathe, as Discover magazine described the scene. And one group of European catfish, the continent's largest freshwater fish at up to 1.5 meters long, have learned to launch themselves out of the water, clench a pigeon in their jaws, writhe back into the water and proceed to dine.
All this was discovered by Julien Cucherousset, a researcher from Paul Sabatier University in Toulouse, after local fishermen told him about the phenomenon, Discover reported. He proceeded to film 54 attacks during summer 2011, 28 percent of which succeeded, and dubbed the fish "freshwater killer whales."
The invasive European catfish has learned to grab tasty pigeons from the shore, stranding themselves on the beach for precious seconds as they nab their prey, the scientific journal PLoS ONE reported on December 5.
On a small gravel island in the middle of the River Tarn winding through the city of Albi, in southwestern France, pigeons gather to clean and bathe, as Discover magazine described the scene. And one group of European catfish, the continent's largest freshwater fish at up to 1.5 meters long, have learned to launch themselves out of the water, clench a pigeon in their jaws, writhe back into the water and proceed to dine.
All this was discovered by Julien Cucherousset, a researcher from Paul Sabatier University in Toulouse, after local fishermen told him about the phenomenon, Discover reported. He proceeded to film 54 attacks during summer 2011, 28 percent of which succeeded, and dubbed the fish "freshwater killer whales."
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