Stuff You Should Know - Short Stuff: Alligator Gar
Episode Date: July 6, 2022The alligator gar is one scary looking fish. Learn all about these monsters in today's episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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Hey, and welcome to the short stuff. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here for Dave.
So this is short stuff as usual. Let's go. So can I tell you my inspiration for this was,
I was at the lake the other day. We go to a lake here in Georgia. I'm not going to name it because
I don't want to be stalked. Like no name, like no name. And I was at the lake the other day
doing a project and I was very hot because it's very hot in Georgia right now. And I went to jump
in to cool down and right as I was going to take a leap off the dock, I saw a very large,
like a two and a half foot garfish kind of trickle toward the surface. And I've seen them
before out there occasionally, but it just scared the life out of me because it is a terrifying
looking fish. Yeah. If you don't know what a garfish looks like, just do a little image search.
And they have these long, very sharp toothed snouts. And they are terrifying. It looks like
something that you would find in a river in South America and not one that you would jump
into a lake in Georgia. Right. And also you travel back in time 50 million years too,
because they definitely look prehistoric for sure. Oh, absolutely. And this is specifically
about the alligator gar. And this comes from our old friends at House Stuff Works and Michelle
Konstantinovsky, great name. Very nice. But the alligator gar is super old, right?
Yeah. I think they found fossils as old as 100 million years old, not just 50.
And they actually, the reason that it's called an alligator gar is because it has a long snout too,
but rather than being pointed like most other gar, it's flattened, giving it kind of like a shovel
like appearance or actually like an alligator snout. And the Latin name for it is attractosteus
spatula. And that's right, spatula. It's the spatula fish is another way to put it.
And it, I mean, it really does look like an alligator snout when you see a picture of these
things. Yeah, they are huge. They're seven living species of gar. And the alligator gar
is the largest by far. The other way you can tell a diff is they have two rows of teeth,
the alligator gar on the upper jaw, instead of just the one row of teeth of the regular gar.
And I think their head is a bit wider. Yeah. And I think normally they're something like
about 160 pounds to maybe six feet long, which is enormous for a fish. Yes. But they have been,
I guess, found up to 350 pounds and 10 feet long, which is even more enormous. I think the record,
at least in Texas, is 302 pounds. That was back in 1953. And the reason we bring up Texas is because
a YouTuber named Peyton Moore, who's a conservationist, posted a video on his channel, Wildlife,
last May, because he caught one of these things and it was eight feet long and probably about
300 pounds. Did you watch that video? I did not. It is a very large fish and he likened it to
kind of hanging onto the end of a car that's trying to roll down a driveway.
I saw that. I don't see how you bring in a fish like this that's that heavy, but he knew what
he was doing. And it's just enormous, man. I think at the end he had it, he obviously released it,
but he was kind of measuring it and showing it off for the camera. And this thing just whipped
around to sort of wriggle and just like, it's so strong, it just knocks this guy over and then
swims away. And he's like, well, I guess I was going to let it go, but apparently that just
happened now. Good for him for letting it go or at least planning to, you know?
Well, you do let them go because apparently they're not good for eating. They, for a couple of
reasons, they don't taste great. And they are covered with these, it's almost like a armored scale.
They're called Ganoid Scales. And it's like that sort of like an armor you would see on a dinosaur,
basically. Right. Yeah, they're very dinosaur. Like, and yeah, and the, even if you can dress them,
or I should say clean them to eat, like the meat that you get off of it's not going to be very
good. And if you find any row or fish eggs in a gar, you want to leave those alone because
they're toxic no matter what gar species you're dealing with. So yeah, not really a delicacy
in any way, shape or form. Should we take a break? I say we take a break and then we'll come back
and talk more about Alligator Gar. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips
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Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh
Atikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born,
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So, Chuck, I found out some pretty interesting stuff about them.
Let's hear it.
An alligator gar is an opportunistic eater and it'll eat basically anything. I saw that they'll
eat deer and raccoons if they get a chance. They'll eat waterfowl turtles, crabs, other fish.
But one of the ways that they catch some of these things, especially some of the harder to
catch ones, they play dead. They ambush their prey by playing dead. They'll float and make another
fish or a raccoon or something that's going to swim past, think that it's dead. Then all of a
sudden, it grabs it out of the water and that thing's dead. And they do eat all those things and
they have those huge alligator-like mouths and teeth, so they're super scary. But apparently,
they're not going to come after you. I was just being a little baby boy the other day when I got
scared and wouldn't jump in. If I would have jumped in, this thing would have scattered and gone far
away. It wouldn't have said, you know, human arm must eat. They're just not going to come after you.
So you don't need to fear. I think there's never been on record a case of an alligator
gar attacking somebody, right? Right. Yeah, that's what I've seen as well. But I mean,
I guess if you had seen a gar that was floating, you would have wanted to steer clear of that one
because maybe it wouldn't ambush your arm. You said that you saw them in your lake. I'm taking
it that your no-name lake is freshwater, right? No, it's a saltwater lake in the middle of Georgia.
You never know. There's some saltiness in Georgia, for sure. Yeah, it's freshwater. And they're only
in North America, which is pretty surprising. Yeah, but they used to be, remember we said that
their fossils have been dated back to 100 million years. They used to be found all over the place.
But yeah, now they're only in North America. They're a freshwater species and they tend to like
parts of like bodies of water with poor oxygen. So like, say like maybe a cove where you'd
launch a boat or a backwater of a river that's kind of outside of the turbulence or even swamps
or bayous. And one reason they can survive in these kind of lower oxygen environments is they
have an air bladder that not only helps them float, it also distributes oxygen to their blood
slowly, but surely. So they don't have to take in that much oxygen because they can hold a bunch
at once. Yeah, and I think it's, I think they're in Central America too. I just wanted to put that
on the record. So let's say the Americas. What, but not South America. Man, these alligator
gar are really tough to pin down. I think North and Central America, because I did seek something
about Costa Rica. Okay, so the Americas. Okay. So people, just because you don't eat them,
people still do fish for them like this guy. I think there are sort of,
there are a lot of regulations in place because they are really slow to reach the age where
they can make little gar. They spawn in very specialized areas. So they're very ripe for
overfishing and for like shrinking of species. But for that reason, they're highly, highly
regulated. And you're basically, at least in Florida, and I think a lot of other places,
you're only going to be given a permit to fish for these things if it's scientific research
or you're working in like managing the species or something like that.
I tittered earlier, by the way, I want to say at an inappropriate time, but it was because you said
they're ripe for overfishing and I just thought of a ripe gar and that sounds so gross.
They're scary looking. Early on though, that like, you know, earlier humans would fish for them and
do all sorts of things that armor like, those armor like scales, those guinoid scales,
they made jewelry out of them and tools and things like that because they're
really tough. And I think they would use their skin for products and the skin oil for different
things. Yeah, who knows what. Do you have anything else? I don't have anything else. I think we've
talked alligator, alligator, car to death. Well, I guess the last thing we should mention is that
even though they do are opportunistic eaters, I think there used to be an idea that they would
devastate other fish populations and that's apparently not the case, right? Yeah, that's
right. So they were overfished because they were considered a nuisance fish. So they were trying
to protect the fish that they wanted by fishing the alligator gar out, but turns out they were
wrong. I do have one more thing. Okay. The name gar for these fish is, it comes from the Anglo
Saxon word for spear. That is good. And I've got one more thing. Okay. I cannot help but think
of a garfish without thinking of the great, great documentary, Vernon, Florida, my favorite
documentary of all time by the great Aero Morris. And one of the characters, the guy that talks
like this, he talks about swimming in the river and then, oh, you come up on one of those garfish.
You better look out, brother. Really? And I saw that movie in college, right? I didn't know what
a garfish was. It was many years later that I saw a gar and I was like, oh, I get it now.
I got to see that movie once and for all. It's just, there's nothing like it. Yeah.
You got anything else? I think, yeah. You got anything else? I got nothing else. All right.
Well, that means everybody's short stuff is out.
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