South Florida fisherman Ryan Alvarez caught a giant snakehead on April 23 that’s been certified as a new world record. The International Game Fish Association highlighted the record fish in a Facebook ...
BALTIMORE, Maryland (WJZ) — The snakehead fish is an invasive species that came into Maryland in the early 2000s. They’ve been a big problem for our aquatic ecosystem because they eat everything, but ...
An invasive snakehead fish is seen in Missouri. Breeding populations have established themselves in the state’s waterways, threatening native fish and local ecosystems. Missouri Department of ...
CANTON, MA -- An angler in Massachusetts hauled in a fish covered in slime and sporting a mouth full of fangs. "Let's be honest here, I'm out here chasing big bass," Mike Powell said in an interview ...
IT OUT FOR US. CAN I DRAG YOU DOWN? GET OUT OF THE TREE. GET OUT OF THE TREE! OH, YOU AIN’T GOING NOWHERE. IT’S A DIFFICULT CATCH, BUT DAVID STERN REELS IN A NORTHERN SNAKEHEAD FISH, SO BIG IT’S ...
It may sound like something out of science fiction: A three-foot-long fish that can breathe air, “walk” on land and survive for days out of the water. But the northern snakehead is very real—and, ...
An invasive fish that can also survive on land has been found in a Missouri lake, but it’s also no stranger to the Mississippi River and Lake Michigan. The northern snakehead is not a native to North ...
It’s been nicknamed Frankenfish. But it’s turning out to be more of a Superfish, with Lex Luthor attitude. The northern snakehead, a large Asiatic invasive species, has been expanding in Berks County ...
The popularity of fishing for invasive northern snakeheads hasn’t stopped growing. Just ask Eddie Weber, the owner of High Octance Custom Baits, and Steve Cahn — two veteran snakehead junkies based in ...
An invasive fish with the head of a snake and the ability to survive on land for several days has been detected in Missouri. The state's Department of Conservation confirmed on Friday that a northern ...
Many people assume snakeheads spend most of their time lying in ambush, and if you catch one on a piece of structure, you’ve hit the only one there. Joe Cermele The most snakeheads I caught in a ...