World

Fishermen use fruit to lure ‘large’ river creature and discover new species in India

Fishermen and scientists in Kerala caught a “large” river creature with “prominent” eyes and discovered a new species, a study said.
Fishermen and scientists in Kerala caught a “large” river creature with “prominent” eyes and discovered a new species, a study said. Google Street View August 2023 © 2024 Google

Fishermen baited a trap with fruit and dropped it into a river in southern India. When they hauled in their catch, they found a “large” river creature with “prominent” eyes.

It turned out to be a new species.

Scientists visited a river in Kerala in 2019 to search for black collared catfish with the help of local fishermen, according to a study published Dec. 31 in the peer-reviewed Indian Journal of Fisheries.

/During the trip, researchers noticed a few of the “larger” catfish didn’t have the distinctive “collar” of black collared catfish, the study said. Anglers “insisted” the species simply lost its “collar marking as it grows,” but researchers weren’t convinced.

The intrigue lingered, so researchers returned to the river in 2020 and caught a few more of these collar-less catfish. They analyzed the animal’s DNA and quickly realized they’d discovered a new species: Horabagrus obscurus, or the obscure Western Ghats catfish.

Two Horabagrus obscurus, or obscure Western Ghats catfish.
Two Horabagrus obscurus, or obscure Western Ghats catfish. Photos from Kumar, Ravi, Krishnaprasoon and Basheer (2024)

Obscure Western Ghats catfish are considered “large,” reaching over 16 inches in length, the study said. They have “slender” bodies, “broad” heads and “prominent” eyes.

Photos show the “greenish-brown” coloring and small black markings of the new species. Its hue varies from lighter and yellowy to darker and brownish. Its fins are brighter than the rest of its body.

Fishermen generally catch the new species during the “low-water season from deep pools,” typically using gillnets or “traps with the fruit of the oil palm as bait,” the study said. Some of the catfish “regurgitated small bivalve shells a few hours after capture.”

An Horabagrus obscurus, or obscure Western Ghats catfish.
An Horabagrus obscurus, or obscure Western Ghats catfish. Photo from Kumar, Ravi, Krishnaprasoon and Basheer (2024)

Discover more new species

Thousands of new species are found each year. Here are three of our most recent eye-catching stories.

Cryptic creature found at volcanic lava field in Argentina is new species

Spraying venom and waiting in ambush are techniques for these new species

Diver spots 'large'-eyed sea creature lurking in cave — and discovers new species

Want to read more? Check out our stories here.


Researchers said they named the new species after the Latin word “obscurus,” “meaning dark or cloudy,” because of its coloring. The name also means “cryptic or ambiguous,” a reference to the initial “confusion” over the new species’ identity.

So far, obscure Western Ghats catfish have only been found in a small stretch of the Chalakkudy River in Kerala, the study said. Kerala is a state in southwestern India and a roughly 1,600-mile drive south from New Delhi.

The new species was identified by its coloring, body shape, eye size, skeleton and DNA, the study said.

The research team included Rahul Kumar, Charan Ravi, N. P. Krishnaprasoon and V. S. Basheer.

Read Next
Read Next
Read Next

This story was originally published January 2, 2025 at 11:52 AM with the headline "Fishermen use fruit to lure ‘large’ river creature and discover new species in India."

Aspen Pflughoeft
McClatchy DC
Aspen Pflughoeft covers real-time news for McClatchy. She is a graduate of Minerva University where she studied communications, history, and international politics. Previously, she reported for Deseret News.
Get one year of unlimited digital access for $159.99
#ReadLocal

Only 44¢ per day

SUBSCRIBE NOW