Don’t put it back, its an aggressive invasive species
Christ
That’s a lot of nuggets right there
can u imagine going noodlin and this chomps down on you oh my god
Duuuuude!! Catfish grow to the amount of food there is which means the river these guys came from must be plentiful as fuck, or it’s eating the native species. PSA: do NOT catch and release catfish. The fuckers will screw with the rivers ecosystem if they’re not native to the area. These are the sort of size fish that WILL have a go at eating people as well, they will probs chock but yeah. Catfish have little to no sight, since they’re bottom feeders they scout for food mostly using their feelers, and just swallow whatever they think can fit in their mouths.
I watch a lot of Jeremy Wades River Monsters when I’m bored. The shit he films is ridiculous and I love it.
Edit: Cat fish are also cannibals if there’s no other food source.
There’s a couple of these big suckers in the Lahn in Limburg. It’s one of the places that they take people to do diving instruction and training in Germany and sometimes the divers come back completely horrified because they crossed paths with something straight out of Lovecraft and the instructors are like “Oh, you saw the catfish.”
I guess if that doesn’t scare you off of diving, nothing will.
They also pose as different people online… dangerous creatures
I FOUND IT! And on Elodie’s blog no less. Someone give me a detective award
holy SHIT you found something on my blog? on my TUMBLR blog, with your own hands, you found something you were looking for? Something THIS old? JEsus FUCK, yes, @meromattandin you get an AWARD
Ok but catching those two was a Sampei level feat, jesus look at the size of those things.
one of my favorite things is how badgers and coyotes will hunt cooperatively. as in not just like happening to go after the same thing at the same time but actually combining efforts to bring down prey; coyotes are faster and can chase down prey species, while badgers are adept at digging them out of their burrows
“It’s very unusual to see a bear and a wolf getting on like this” says Finnish photographer Lassi Rautiainen, 56, who took these surprising photos. The female grey wolf and male brown were spotted every night for ten days straight, spending several hours together between 8pm and 4am. They would even share food with each other. “No-one can know exactly why or how the young wolf and bear became friends,” Lassi told the Daily Mail. “I think that perhaps they were both alone and they were young and a bit unsure of how to survive alone…It is nice to share rare events in the wild that you would never expect to see.”