Mark Spitzer’s latest book, In Search for Monster Fish: Angling for a More Sustainable Planet, will appeal to all types of anglers and adventurers. Mark Spitzer is an Associate Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Central Arkansas and author of over twenty-five books. His previous forays into fish writing include three non-fiction books: Season of the Gar: Adventures in Pursuit of America’s Most Misunderstood Fish (2010, Return of the Gar (2015), and Beautifully Grotesque Fish of the American West (2017). He has also written fishy fiction, e.g., Garapaima: A Monster Fish Novel (2015).
In Search of Monster Fish is a series of stories in which Spitzer seeks out a new monster fish. Although he doesn’t formally define “monster” fish, it is apparent that size matters and big teeth add to the mystique. The term was popularized by National Geographic’s Monster Fish show. But there are so many monster-fish stories to tell, we cannot get enough. The author’s purpose goes beyond showing off his fishing skills. It’s more about the search.
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Book cover of In Search of Monster Fish shows Mark Spitzer with a Doitsu variety koi carp. |
Fishing
is often a never-ending series of quests. Many serious observers have identified
5 stages of an angler’s life, stated simply as Any Fish, Many Fish, Big Fish,
No Fish, and finally Give Back Fish (McKenna 2013). Each monster fish was something new for Spitzer to pursue. Each quest required new skills and a new
place. Every story contains some daily conversation with himself about why he's here.
He asks "What was I put here to do?" This is a
deep and difficult philosophical question to pose in a book entitled In Search of Monster
Fish. It is those daily conversations that make this book most
interesting. In the first chapter, “Demythologizing
Demonologies,” we join Spitzer, guide Wilson, and Lea the fun-loving poetry
professor, in the Amazon in pursuit of monster fish myths. Their first fish, which the
guide called dormelinas, was captured by swinging a machete. He begins the conversation about the monster
fish mystique as they learn to catch and eat local fish (piranha fritta) from
their guide.
In “Catfishalonia,” Spitzer seeks to catch a
Wels Catfish, Siluro or Silurus glanis.
This is the biggest freshwater catfish which can exceed 200 pounds and 7
feet. It is an opportunistic catfish and in the Ebro River it’s referred to as "The
Ebro Monster.” Like other catfish, it
feeds at night on fish, ducks, voles, and the misplaced American red crayfish (Procambarus
clarkii). In 1974, a German fisheries biologist named
Roland Lorkowsky introduced young Wels Catfish to the Ebro River to create a
recreational fishery. The Ebro is no
pristine river; rather, it’s a working river with hydroelectric dams, nuclear
plants, chemical plants, orchards, and animal agriculture. By the late 1980s, anglers were boasting of catches of catfish
over 90 pounds, which led to guiding industry for tourist anglers. While I was
reading this book, a British angler caught an 8-foot albino catfish that weighed 194 pounds. Spitzer does not exaggerate about monster fish. Watch
Spitzer vs Wels Catfish to see the outcome.
In
“Cuda Chaos in the Dominican Republic,” Spitzer and his now fiancĂ©e are beaten
by ocean waves in search of barracuda, in particular small ones because the
largest Barracuda have toxic levels of the ciguatoxin. Nothing
prepares one for rough waters, but Lea and Mark eventually catch and eat Barracuda in a Cuda
creole. In “Sportfishing Gar,” Spitzer explores his local fishing water, Lake Conway,
which contains three species of gar. Spitzer is experienced catching them with
jug lines and trot lines, but this adventure represents his very first efforts
at catching gar with a rope lure. See Doug Jeffries YouTube video for instruction on making a rope lure. After
initial success, his next trial is to catch a gar on a fly. But this quest becomes a lesson in learning
to fly cast like an experienced fly fisher—not a goal for amateur.
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Mark Spitzer with Alligator Gar. (c) Mark Spitzer |
After
a honeymoon in Borneo, he is jet-lagged while “Monster-fishing shark off
Montauk,” the eastern end of the Long Island peninsula in New York. He solicits the help of Captain John Krol aboard
the Let’s Go Fishin. Captain
John has been fishing these waters since the 1980s. Montauk is the site of an annual shark tournament
with big money prizes and donation of shark meat to food pantries. Spitzer opens a brand new bucket of chum, and
raises questions about shark hunting. Captain Krol tells him “it used to be all
about tuna out here, but when the tuna thinned due to the mushrooming markets,
something else had to take its place.
Shark then became the thing.” According
to the experienced Krol, everything is down compared to the past. Before tuna were completed fished out, “there
was only shark hunter in these waters...Frank Mundus. After trying to kill
everything in the ocean, he became a conservationist…then tried to save
everything in it.” True, “Monster Man” Mundus is well-known in
the region and was the inspiration for the character Quint in the book and movie, Jaws.
After
a Great White Shark terrorized a New England town in the movie, Jaws, the
interest in shark fishing grew and shark tournaments incentivized shark harvest. Shark are extremely vulnerable to overfishing due to low
reproductive output, high extinction risk, and intrinsic vulnerabilities to
overexploitation. Recreational fishing for sharks is a global management
concern (Babcock 2009; Shiffman 2014; Gallagher et al. 2017). Frank Mundus was responsible for calling shark
fishing “monster fishing,” which gained notoriety when he harpoon-captured a
massive white shark off Montauk that he estimated at ~2000 kg in 1964 (4500 pounds) (Mundus and Wisner 1971). It’s true that Mundus became a shark hunter turned conservationist. He was promoted circle hooks, initiated a
shark tagging program, and advocated for catch and release. Today there is a one
shark per day limit with 54-inch minimum regulation.
Shark
hunting is very controversial, and Spitzer gets his facts straight. Worm et al. (2013) estimated that the total
number of sharks killed by fisheries each year is between 63 and 273 million,
with an average of approximately 100 million. The problem is overfishing and as
Spitzer writes “monster fish have a lot to teach us, but to learn from them we
need to keep them around.” While
chumming for sharks, he observes large fishing trawlers and reflects on his
fishing quests for monster fish. Spitzer
writes “…I was heading in the right direction, but if this monster-fish thing
is really more than just an excuse for me to go fishing, then I need to look
even harder. Way harder!”
In
Monster carp in France, Spitzer tries a week of extreme carp angling. Carp know no borders and the Itkus fishing lake is designed to make carp anglers respect their borders. Each section of the fishing lake is called a ‘swim’
and anglers reserve their swims. If you get skunked in your assigned swim, no wandering to other areas of the
lake is permitted. Spitzer must admit his
ignorance in order to catch a monster carp.
Specialized carp rigs include hair rigs, boilies, long carp rods, and pop-up
rod alarms. These are extreme carp anglers who drive and
survive during a long week of carp angling. Fish are caught, photographed, and released to bite again—but
only after the extreme angler applies first-aid cream to damaged carp lips. Anything that helps reduce the ingress of
bacteria into open wounds is likely to benefit the carp. However, this technique has not been transferred
to North America. Carp are a learned
preference for monster fishing. Clearly,
in managed waters they can reach monster sizes, as long as one practices catch
and release. Mirror
carp, a genetic mutation with scattered scales covering only part of the body,
were a target here. Spitzer was skunked on some days, but did land the Doitsu
variety Koi which is pictured on the book's cover. It remains a great paradox that carp are such a
highly desired species in some places while reviled for its dominance and damages in lake ecosystems in other places.
“Bananas from Tarpon” is Switzer’s quest to catch tarpon and
supersize stingrays in Gambia.
With his
“boss lady” Lea, his guides Farmara, Junior, and Fabu, he eats his first
stingray, complete with gelatinous skin and cartilage.
Although he was thrilled to catch a “large”
tarpon, it was barely large enough to qualify as an adult specimen.
His conversation gets back to his
development as an angler and what he can put back. Food security in Gambia
depends on catching and keeping fish.
The old saw “Game fish are too valuable to only by caught once” really
doesn’t make sense here. Humans are a species that looks out for itself first. His
thinking is turning as he travels to Senegal with thoughts of monster billfishes, Zane Grey, and Ernest Hemingway.
Here near the heart of the world’s richest fishing areas, the local fishers were harvesting Skipjack Tuna
Katsuwonus
pelamis with handlines from small boats, called pirogues.
But larger vessels and foreign trawlers are
threatening the livelihoods of Senegalese artisinal fishers.
Spitzer casted for small tuna and
used them as bait for his pursuit of billfishes including the Blue Marlin
Makaira
nigricans, a species threatened by overfishing.
Before long, he switches his target to the
Dorado, or Mahi Mahi
Coryphaena hippurus, and he reflects
again on putting back.
In the “Italian Zander” the conversation continues with
twenty ways to put back more. His interest in Monster Zander peaked after a
story of monster fish terrorizing swimmers in a Swiss lake. It’s very unusual
for Zander
Sander lucioperca to attack humans, but the strange story initiated his quest. The Zander is closely related to the Walleye
Sander vitreus. In fact the world record Zander at 25.3 pounds, is only slightly larger than
the world record Walleye at 22.7 pounds, from Greer’s Ferry Lake in Arkansas. With
his guide, Fabrizio, he fishes Lake Como in northern Italy.
This natural lake has a fish fauna that is
altered by widespread stocking of non-native fishes (Volta et al. 2018).
After catching a Zander, European chub, European
Perch, Northern Pike, and a North American favorite
—a Largemouth Bass, he returns
to the conversation before traveling to the boot heel of Italy to pursue Conger
Eel.
You see there is a myth about a
130 pound Conger Eel landed off the coast of Devon. The European Conger
Conger conger reaches a maximum size of 3 meters
though more typical big ones are 1.5 m. I suspect this trip was more about the seafood. His guide, Antonio, had a mis-shapened finger
from a Moray Eel encounter and spoke only Italian.
The longline they fished encountered several
species, including some Conger, b
ut mostly the longline caught immature fish. While his reward
was
buona murena fritta, the reminder of overfishing immature fish troubled him.
The
concluding chapter is “Solutions for Disenlightenment” where Spitzer finishes his conversation
about giving back. Without giving away
the ending, he examines why monster fish are so sacred to him. What is a man without monster fish? What are reasonable solutions? We need scientists and discovery and more
types of FishLove. No
single, simple answer exists “to sustain the terrifying beauty of this mind
boggling, mind blowing, and mind altering monster fish world.” (Spitzer 2019,
p. 180). I recommend that you join Mark Spitzer on his expeditions in this fun- and monster-filled book and plan your next fishing quest.
References
Babcock, E.A. 2009.
Recreational fishing for pelagic sharks worldwide. Pages
193-204 in I.-M.D. Camhi, E.K. Pikitch, and E.A. Babcock, editors. Sharks of
the open ocean: Biology, fisheries, and conservation. Blackwell Publishing, Oxford.
Gallagher, A.J., N. Hammerschlag,
A.J. Danylchuk, and S.J. Cooke. 2017 Shark recreational fisheries: Status,
challenges, and research needs. Ambio 46(4):385-398. doi:
10.1007/s13280-016-0856-8
Mundus, F., and W.L. Wisner. 1971. Sportfishing for sharks. Collier Books,
New York.
Shiffman, D.S. 2014. More large sharks were killed by
recreational anglers than commercial fishermen in the US last year. Retrieved November
3, 2019. Available: www.southernfriedscience.com/?p=17834.
Spitzer, M. 2019. In Search of Monster Fish:
Angling for a More Sustainable Planet. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln,
Nebraska. 189 pp
Volta, P., E. Jeppesen, P. Sala, S. Galafassi, C. Foglini, C. Puzzi, and
I.J. Winfield. 2018. Fish assemblages in
deep Italian subalpine lakes: history and present status with emphasis on
non-native species. Hydrobiologia 824:255-270
Worm, B., B. Davis, L.
Kettemer, C. Ward-Paige, D. Chapman, M. Heithaus, S. Kessel, and S. Gruber. 2013. Global catches, exploitation rates, and
rebuilding options for sharks. Marine Policy 40: 194-204.