Yes mate its a Striped Snakehead! And a very big one too! This size is considered massive over here and in many other places.I haven't yet but is that fish in tge furst photo some type of snakehead?
Over here, water quality is bad so no. Left hand all the way! There are 5 species of channa in our waterways. We have Channa maculata (native species), Channa asiatica (native species), Channa gachua (non native), Channa striata (non native), and Channa micropeltes (non native obviously). Most common species in the south is Channa striata, most common in the north is Channa maculata. Channa gachua is found mostly in the southern areas as well while the other small species Channa asiatica is found in the western areas within the mountain streams, they are also found in small populations around the south. Channa micropeltes are present in our reservoirs.Nice catches! I'm most surprised and pleased to see another left handed fisherman, not many of us. Are there many species of Channa over there in the waterways? I've always heard they are good table fish (to eat)?
The gachua are tiny, biggest are probably only around 20 centimeters. Most aggressive species would be maculata, and the biggest is of course the micropeltes. However, the striata isn't far off.Thank you for taking the time to respond! That's great to learn. I would personally be fishing for the Gachua!
Maculata are small, very small, the biggest sizes are still smaller than the striata. Maculata are incredibly aggressive, they bite down on anything and never let go.I'm surprised to hear the maculata would be more aggressive than the micropeltes. I've only owned diplogramma and micropeltes in the past.
Are the maculata close in size?