http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/featured/flesh-eating-mutant-fish-invades-nepal/2738

Flesh Eating Mutant Fish Invades Nepal



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Giant Goonch

Picture the scene: It's a hot, balmy day in India, the sun's rays beat down, 
prickling the skin. A meandering river ahead looks inviting, and although it's 
not the clearest water in the world, a cool, refreshing dip would soothe the 
effects of the midday sun.

A word of warning: don't do it! Otherwise you may fall prey to a fearsome, 
grotesque monster waiting in the depths. Or so residents near the Great Kali 
River believe.

It is thought that a stretch of the river, popular with adventurers seeking the 
thrills of white water rafting, is home to a killer mutant fish. Locals in the 
India-Nepal border region have been convinced there is something untoward 
lingering in the river for many years but, recently, when an 18-year-old 
Nepalese boy was dragged down into the depths by something described as an 
'elongated pig', events were finally investigated.


Normal Sized Goonch

A TV presenter and biologist, Jeremy Wade, investigated the mysterious 
disappearances for a documentary and discovered a huge type of catfish, called 
a goonch, may be responsible for the carnage.

For centuries, the river has been used in Hindu ceremonies - like the Ganges, 
bodies are totally immersed in the river to help send their soul to heaven - 
with local residents releasing their loved ones into the water after the 
funeral pyres have gone out. The giant fish, one of the biggest fresh water 
fish in existence, may have developed an uncanny taste for human flesh after 
feasting on the remains of burnt corpses. Now unsuspecting bathers cooling off 
in the Kali are at risk of becoming fish food.

  Wade said: "The locals have told me of a theory that this monster has grown 
extra large on a diet of partially burnt corpses. It has perhaps got this taste 
for flesh by feasting on remains of funeral pyres. There will be a few freak 
individuals that grow bigger than the other ones and if you throw in extra 
food, they will grow even bigger."


Smile for the camera

On a trip to the area, Wade caught one of the scavenging beasts which measured 
almost 6 feet long and weighed a shocking 161lb, which to date is a world 
record weight for this species of fish.

"If that got hold of you, there'd be no getting away," said Wade.

Funny, don't public swimming pools look so much more inviting now?


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