Subscribe Now! National Geographic Magazine $15
Visit our Online Shops

Sign up for free

Newsletters

Once a month
get new photos
and expert tips.

Taimen
Hucho taimen

Photo: Close-up of a taimen
Close-up of a taimen in Mongolia
Photograph courtesy Zeb Hogan

Taimen Profile

The taimen is the largest member of the salmonid family, which also includes trout and salmon. These fish are fierce predators that sometimes chase their prey in packs, a practice that earned them the nickname "river wolves."

They have gray-green heads with streamlined, reddish-brown bodies. And they can be enormous, with particularly large specimens reaching six feet (two meters) long.

Taimen, also called giant Eurasian trout, are notoriously voracious and have a varied diet that includes primarily fish, but also ducks and even mammals like rats or bats. These insatiable fish will also prey upon one another. Some large taimen are known to have suffocated while trying to swallow a slightly smaller member of their own species.

Taimen once swam in rivers from the Russian Pacific Coast westward throughout the former Soviet Union and Mongolia. Today they have been wiped out from much of their range, and significant populations remain only in Russia and Mongolia.

This riverine behemoth is revered by many Mongolian Buddhists as the child of an ancient river spirit, and it has long enjoyed relative peace in Mongolia, where the nomadic culture has traditionally eschewed fishing. But shifting lifestyles in modernizing Mongolia have meant more logging, mining, and grazing, which have harmed water quality in the taimen's range. And fishing, which has driven the taimen to near extinction in China, is beginning to take a toll in Mongolia.

Taimen are spread sparsely throughout their habitat. A study of some 60 miles (100 kilometers) of the rivers where the fish still thrive revealed only about 2,000 "catchable" taimen—those 26 inches (66 centimeters) or bigger. Because of their scarcity, the removal of even a single large fish can be critical.

Today recreational taimen fishing has become an international drawing card and a significant revenue source for regional economies. Mongolian officials, together with several nonprofit organizations, are trying to find a balance to curb poaching yet promote regulated fishing and the revenue it brings.

Fast Facts

Type: Fish
Diet: Carnivore
Average lifespan in the wild: 50 years
Size: Up to 6.5 ft (2 m)
Weight: Up to 200 lbs (90 kg)
Did you know? The largest recorded taimen ever caught weighed in at 231 pounds (105 kilograms) and was 83 inches (210 centimeters) long.
Protection status: Threatened
Size relative to a 6-ft (2-m) man:
Illustration of the animal's relative size

Multimedia

Related Features

Photo: Man with giant Eurasian trout

Photo Gallery: Megafishes

From sturgeon to taimen, giant freshwater fish are some of the most rare and vulnerable species on Earth.

Photo: Zeb Hogan holding a taimen

News Series: Megafishes

Join National Geographic News on the trail with Zeb Hogan as he tracks down and studies real-life "Loch Ness monsters."

Photo: A school of fish

Fish Videos

Dive beneath the surface of rivers, lakes, and oceans, and see the world of fish from a new perspective.

More Megafishes

Map: Taimen range
 Taimen range

Special Advertising Sections

Phot: Girl drinking bottled water

Interactive Map

Explore the signs of and solutions to the world’s water crisis.

Photo: The Cloud Gate in Chicago

Download City Guides

Check out the local hotspots with downloadable city guides.

Fish Right Rail

Get the Latest Headlines

Photo: Grizzly bears

Make us your online news source.

Get Animal Pictures

Photo: Anemonefish

Get your daily dose of photos.

For Kids!

Photo: A cartoon dog

It's no stretch to find fun facts on our Kids site!

Shop National Geographic DVDs

Whatever your interest, you'll be entertained and educated with our collection of best-selling DVDs.