Giant Mekong catfish are not in the Mississippi River


An Illinois man’s quest to salvage his grandfather’s reputation led him to catch a 736-pound catfish.

That’s according to a four-year-old story that has gotten a lot of recent traffic on Facebook, despite its astonishing claim that this massive fish has been swimming in Mississippi waters for at least 114 years.

Alton resident catches 736-pound catfish in Mississippi River,” reads the headline on the story from Riverbender.com, which appears to share news and headlines from Alton, Ill. 

The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

According to the story, 114 years passed between the time in 1902 when a man named “Red Mudger…discovered the biggest catfish ever known to man” and the day in 2016 when his grandson, Kato “Mudcat” Mudger, felt a tug at his fishing line that turned out to be a 170-year-old Mekong giant catfish — the same one his grandfather had seen in 1902.

A couple things stand out about this claim:

First, the article was published April 1, 2016, making it likely April Fools’ Day fodder.

Second, a picture accompanying the story has been doctored. It shows the supposed 736-pound catfish lying on the ground. Next to it, a fisherman’s torso and legs can be seen, giving the viewer a sense of scale for the giant catfish.

But the original fish photo was published in a Smithsonian article from Sept. 25, 2015, and credited to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The Smithsonian photo shows no sign of a human standing next to the fish and the caption under the picture identifies the fish as a flathead catfish, not a giant Mekong catfish, as the Riverbender story suggests.

Flathead catfish are native to the Mississippi River, but they don’t grow heavier than 123 pounds or longer than 5 feet according to FishBase. Mekong catfish can grow to be 650 pounds, which is closer to 736 pounds, but they have never been seen outside of Southeast Asia’s Mekong River. They are endemic to the area and are also categorized as critically endangered

At PolitiFact, we’ve seen before that people get excited about seemingly giant fish, but we have to categorize this story as a tall (and heavy) tale. We rate this Pants on Fire!

By
Emily Venezky
Staff writer
February 14, 2020

Truth-o-meter Ruling

Pants on Fire!

IF YOUR TIME IS SHORT

  • The photo in the article is a picture of a flathead catfish, native to the Mississippi River, that doesn’t grow to be more than 123 pounds.

  • This photo was edited to make the catfish appear larger than it is.

  • Giant Mekong catfish, which can grow up to 650 pounds, are native to the Mekong River in Southeast Asia and have never been seen in the United States.

Statement

An Alton, Ill., man caught a 736-pound Giant Mekong catfish in the Mississippi River.

Context

a post on Facebook

Speaker/Target

Speaker: Bloggers

Statement Date

April 1, 2016
Our Sources

Riverbender.com, Alton resident catches 736-pound catfish in Mississippi River, April 1, 2016

Smithsonian Insider, DNA solves puzzle of catfish dinners, Sept. 25, 2015

FishBase, Pylodictis olivaris on FishBase, visited on Feb 11, 2020 

National Geographic, Mekong Giant Catfish, Explained, visited on Feb. 11, 2020 

National Geographic, Giant Mekong Catfish Babies Hard to Find on the Mekong, Sept. 4, 2018

PolitiFact, No, anglerfish do not typically grow to be seven feet long, Jan. 24, 2020

Translations

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