Alabama Record Posted for Alligator Gar
January 18, 2005
A new
Alabama record for alligator gar has been
set by Michael Houseknecht of
Mobile. Houseknecht caught the
Alabama state record alligator gar while
fishing the
Tensaw
River on
August 13, 2004. The
record fish weighed 151 pounds 5 ounces, the largest fish listed in the
Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources’ records.
Houseknecht received a certificate from the Department signed by Governor
Bob Riley, Commissioner
Barnett Lawley, Wildlife and Freshwater
Fisheries Division Director M. N. “Corky” Pugh, and Fisheries Section Chief
Stan Cook.
Gars are a primitive group of fish that use their gills, but they also
take in atmospheric air. Boaters often see these relatively large fish
gulping air on the water’s surface. Gars, along with bowfins, have ganoid
scales—rough, primitive scales made of bone and an enamel-like substance.
Another characteristic of gars is that their eggs are toxic. Alligator gars
are found on the coastal plain of Alabama, and the family includes two other
species found throughout
Alabama: spotted gar and longnose gar.
Anglers seeing spotted and longnose gars often mistakenly call them
alligator gars. Adult alligator gars always have two rows of needle-like
teeth in the upper jaw, compared to one row in all other gar species.
Houseknecht used fresh whole mullet as bait to catch his
Alabama record alligator gar. Because of
the sharp teeth, plates and ganoid scales that a gar possesses, a steel
leader was used to reduce the chance of the fishing line breaking. A circle
hook was used to increase the chance of a hookup with this bony species.
Alligator gar fishing is popular with Mobile Delta anglers because of the
fish’s large size. Anglers are encouraged to release alligator gars to
increase sporting opportunities for other anglers. The
Alabama legal limit on alligator gar is
two fish per day; no limits are established for other species of gar in
Alabama.
The only other record freshwater fish caught in
Alabama during 2004 was a rainbow trout
caught by Gene Louis Hester, Jr., of Childersburg. Hester caught a 7-pound,
4-ounce trout in Juniper Spring in
Talladega
County on
June 5, 2004.
For more information on alligator gars and rainbow trout in
Alabama, including pictures, click
here.
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