
Ryan Hollister of Turlock was trolling a worm on an Uncle Larry’s spinner for trout at New Melones Lake when he hooked and landed a surprise brown bullhead catfish measuring 14 inches long on Sunday, May 27. He was fishing with his dad, Jim, at 45 feet deep over 115 feet of water near the spillway, a strange place for this bottom-dwelling species to be. Yet, he was not ready for an even stranger surprise.
“The fish didn’t put up much of a fight – I just dragged it in and my dad netted it,” said Hollister. “My dad gave me the net so I could take out the hook and release the fish. I opened the fish’s mouth so I could remove the hook when I saw a scaly diamond pattern.”
“I told my dad, ‘I think this fish has a snake in it. As he pulled the hook out of the fish’s mouth, the hook grabbed the snake, a rattlesnake,” said Hollister.
The snake was already dead, with bite marks on it from the bullhead’s teeth. “The snake was longer than the catfish that ate it,” said Hollister, a high school geology and environmental science teacher at Turlock High School. The duo didn’t get the species they were targeting – rainbow trout, although they lost one near the boat. They did release a couple of spotted bass, and of course, the snake-eating catfish. They were fishing about 75 yards from shore near the spillway. “I don’t know what that catfish was doing that far from the bank, but it was a very memorable day,” he concluded.
In a tweet to Hollister, Jon Rosenfeld, a conservation biologist and lead scientist for The Bay Institute, quipped, “Congratulations on catching a personal example of how food webs really work. Fish eat whatever they overlap with in space & time that fits in their mouth + does not eat them first.”