An angler trolling for striped bass hauled in a 127-pound, 6-ounce Arkansas state record paddlefish on June 15. The monster fish came from Beaver Lake in northwest Arkansas, and it crushed the existing record of 118 pounds.
Mike Schleeper inked his name in the record books while trolling brooder minnows, which are large shiners, about 30 feet deep near a point on the 28,000-acre lake. His friend and fishing buddy Tom Mayberry was there to help during the 45-minute fight.
âIâve been fishing for stripers up here for about 13 years, and Iâve had the chance to catch some stripers over 30 pounds, but this was different,â Schleeper said. âIt didnât strip line and stop in surges like big stripers do, he just sort of pulled the rod down and kept going. I couldnât turn him, so we had to follow him with the trolling motor for about the first 20 minutes.â
Once Schleeper did manage to sway the fish in his direction, the fight continued for nearly another half-hour.
âIt was a 45-minute fight altogether,â Schleeper said. âIâd thought maybe it was a really big striper, but then we could finally see it a little bit. It looked like a giant catfish at first, but as we got it closer to the boat we realized what it was.â
The giant paddlefish had been hooked in one of its pectoral fins incidentally while the anglers were trolling. Snagged fish often donât count toward state records in many states, but paddlefish are accepted because these fish do not bite lures and catches on rod-and-reel are almost exclusively the result of snags.
When Schleeper and Mayberry finally got the fish to the side of the boat, they ran into a snag of their own.
âOur net wasnât big enough for the fish,â Schleeper said. âTom wrestled with that fish for a while trying to figure out a way to get it in the boat. At one point I told him to just cut the line because it wasnât worth it. Tom was adamant that we needed to get that fish in and report it.â
Schleeper agreed with Mayberry and they finally worked a rope through the fishâs mouth to hoist it aboard.
âAs soon as the fish fell to the bottom of the boat, the hook popped free,â Schleeper said. âWe got really lucky.â
According to Jon Stein, Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, Schleeperâs fish is the latest in a series of paddlefish cresting the century mark during the last few years in Beaver Lake. They are the product of a series of stockings that took place from 1990-2000 to ensure a source of broodstock in case local river fisheries began seeing declines.
âThankfully, paddlefish continue to do well in other rivers, and the Beaver Lake fish were never needed,â Stein said. âHowever, these fish are producing great trophy potential for anglers.â
Paddlefish are the oldest surviving animal species in North America according to fossil records. In fact, paddlefish predate some dinosaurs (300 million years). Females may spawn only once every 4 to 7 years.
Paddlefish are planktivores that feed by swimming with their mouths wide open and straining out microscopic plants and animals (phytoplankton and zooplankton) with special gill rakers. They rarely, if ever, bite a baited hook, so catches of these fish are often either the result of spearfishing, intentional snagging during special seasons, incidental snagging by anglers fishing for other species, and nets used by commercial anglers.
A recent regulation passed by the AGFC allows a limited, permit-based snagging season for paddlefish in the White River portion of Beaver Lake from the Twin Bridges Access to the Lake Sequoyah Dam April 15-June 15 to target some of these giant paddlefish as they move upstream.
The world-record paddlefish weighed 164 pounds, 13 ounces. It was caught by Chad Williams at Missouriâs Lake of the Ozarks in March.