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Cryptozoology & Mythical Beings
Monster Fish
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<blockquote data-quote="CarpeNemo" data-source="post: 42721" data-attributes="member: 2550"><p>Considering a lot of my family are fisherman, I take their word on how they claim fish act.</p><p></p><p>One of my closer cousins, a <em>big </em>catfish lover, says that catfish don't exactly stop growing until they reach a certain point where they peak out in their ecosystems. And that the Behemoths I'm talking about are probably 30+ years old. He says that really large catfish will sit at the bottom of a whirlpool, and whatever gets sucked down (like smaller fish or whatever) gets sucked on down by the catfish. Imagine, a Behemoth sitting at the bottom of a whirlpool for a few decades. In theory, they could get as large as a giant shark.</p><p></p><p>But as I said it depends on ecosystem. Noting Kuno up there, he only weighed 77 pounds, but also strangely only lived in two feet of water. I'm sure had the pond he lived in been deeper, he would have got a lot bigger. No doubt in my mind he ate a dog.</p><p></p><p>So yeah, I'm pretty sure there are some lakes and ponds in this world deep enough to hold a four-door sport sedan catfish, that could easily be mistaken for things like a plesiosaur. Especially since these fish would rarely if ever come near the surface, it would be hard to track them down if they went back to the bottom.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CarpeNemo, post: 42721, member: 2550"] Considering a lot of my family are fisherman, I take their word on how they claim fish act. One of my closer cousins, a [I]big [/I]catfish lover, says that catfish don't exactly stop growing until they reach a certain point where they peak out in their ecosystems. And that the Behemoths I'm talking about are probably 30+ years old. He says that really large catfish will sit at the bottom of a whirlpool, and whatever gets sucked down (like smaller fish or whatever) gets sucked on down by the catfish. Imagine, a Behemoth sitting at the bottom of a whirlpool for a few decades. In theory, they could get as large as a giant shark. But as I said it depends on ecosystem. Noting Kuno up there, he only weighed 77 pounds, but also strangely only lived in two feet of water. I'm sure had the pond he lived in been deeper, he would have got a lot bigger. No doubt in my mind he ate a dog. So yeah, I'm pretty sure there are some lakes and ponds in this world deep enough to hold a four-door sport sedan catfish, that could easily be mistaken for things like a plesiosaur. Especially since these fish would rarely if ever come near the surface, it would be hard to track them down if they went back to the bottom. [/QUOTE]
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