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Weird catches: Part 2

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  • Weird catches: Part 2

    A few weeks ago I posted about several weird catches I had in one morning, including a fish with half a tail:

    20220819_071103.jpg

    This evening, I fished at a nearby location and caught another oddity.... a fish with half a head:

    20220909_192006.jpg

    After some brief research, I see this condition is called "pugheadedness", and is apparently quite rare. Because it is so rare, researchers aren't quite sure what causes it but they postulate that environmental conditions such as chemical contaminants, hypoxia, dietary limitations or excesses, and temperature variations may be the culprit, and there is also evidence suggesting the mutation may be genetic. Here are two articles I found describing the condition: https://vtichthyology.blogspot.com/2...nomaly-in.html and https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full...9.2021.1957772
    Dave

    2021 Hobie Outback Camo
    2013 Native Slayer Hidden Oak

  • #2
    Hard to believe that fish survived, I imagine catching food is tough with a mouth like that. For weird fish I put you ahead of the rest.
    Mike
    Pro Angler 14 "The Grand Wazoo"

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Big Mike View Post
      Hard to believe that fish survived, I imagine catching food is tough with a mouth like that.
      When this fish bit I was trolling with rod-in-hand and felt a series of small taps before the rod loaded up. I figured it was just small fish competing for the lure before one finally got it, as I've experienced this before. But after seeing the fish I'm thinking it was just the one frankenfish struggling to get the lure in its mouth. It fought weird too, kinda just rolled through the water like a catfish.
      Dave

      2021 Hobie Outback Camo
      2013 Native Slayer Hidden Oak

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      • #4
        That’s interesting.

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        • #5
          Dave -

          Congratulations on finding some unusual specimens. I have heard of the pug-nosed stripers before but have never caught one myself. I have caught two stripers with a different type of abnormality -- a zigzag spine. Despite that ailment, they seem to swim and feed just fine. This one, caught in 2016, was 20" to 21" long.

          001.jpg

          Speaking of "half" fishes, last week I caught a pickerel that had one of its tail lobes bitten off. Life is tough in nature.

          And when fishing in areas with toothy top predators, it is not uncommon to wind in just the front half of a fish. Here are photos of half of a speck and half of a barracuda.

          2019-03-31-04.jpg

          2020-02-22-03.jpg
          John Veil
          Annapolis
          Native Watercraft Manta Ray 11, Falcon 11

          Author - "Fishing in the Comfort Zone" , "Fishing Road Trip - 2019", "My Fishing Life: Two Years to Remember", and "The Way I Like to Fish -- A Kayak Angler's Guide to Shallow Water, Light Tackle Fishing"

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          • #6
            A face only a mother could love.
            Brian

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            • #7
              Dave,

              I caught a pughead striper in Whitehall Bay in August of 2014:

              P1010251A.jpg

              I also wondered how such a fish could survive to adulthood.

              Mark
              Mark
              Pasadena, MD


              Slate Hobie Revolution 13
              Hidden Oak Native Ultimate 12
              Lizard Lick Native Ultimate FX Pro

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              • #8
                Interesting... thanks for sharing Mark (and good to hear from you again... been a while!)

                John, if I reeled up half a fish in the Chesapeake I would be scared
                Dave

                2021 Hobie Outback Camo
                2013 Native Slayer Hidden Oak

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Mark View Post
                  Dave,

                  I caught a pughead striper in Whitehall Bay in August of 2014:

                  P1010251A.jpg

                  I also wondered how such a fish could survive to adulthood.

                  Mark
                  It's easier for these guys to survive than you think. What they won't do is grow to significant size. Bass largely catch their prey via suction, and these pug headed fish are still able to do that well enough for smaller and slower bait. Enough to keep alive and grow to the size of a small schoolie fish. What they can't really do is feed on the larger menhaden and other bait fish that a striper needs to consume to obtain larger sizes.
                  - Cliff

                  Hobie Compass
                  Perception Pescador Pro 100

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