The wels catfish's mouth contains lines of numerous small teeth, two long
barbels on the upper jaw and four shorter barbels on the lower jaw. It has a long anal fin that extends to the
caudal fin, and a small sharp
dorsal fin relatively far forward. The wels relies largely on
hearing and smell for hunting prey (owing to its sensitive
Weberian apparatus and
chemoreceptors), although like many other catfish, the species exhibits a
tapetum lucidum, providing its eyes with a degree of sensitivity at night, when the species is most active. With its sharp
pectoral fins, it creates an eddy to disorient its victim, which the predator sucks into its mouth and swallows whole. The skin is very slimy. Skin colour varies with environment. Clear water will give the fish a black color, while muddy water will often tend to produce green-brown specimens. The underside is always pale yellow to white in colour.
Albinistic specimens are known to exist and are caught occasionally. With an elongated body-shape, wels are able to swim backwards like
eels. The female produces up to 30,000
eggs per kilogram of body weight. The male guards the nest until the brood hatches, which, depending on water temperature, can take from three to ten days. If the water level decreases too much or too fast the male has been observed to splash the eggs with its tail in order to keep them wet. The wels catfish is a long-lived species, with a specimen of 70 years old having been captured during a recent study in Sweden.
Size The wels is one of the largest freshwater fish in Europe and Western Asia, only exceeded by the
anadromous Atlantic and
beluga sturgeon. Most adult wels catfish are about long; fish longer than are a rarity. At they can weigh and at they can weigh . Only under exceptionally good living circumstances can the wels catfish reach lengths of more than about . Examples include the record wels catfish of Kiebingen (near
Rottenburg, Germany), which was long and weighed . Even larger specimens have been caught in
Poland (2.61 m 109 kg), the
Czech Republic (2.64 m ), the
Dnieper River in
Ukraine, the
Volga River in Russia, the
Ili River in Kazakhstan,
France,
Spain (in the
Ebro),
Italy (in the
Po and
Arno),
Serbia (in
Gruža Lake, where a long specimen weighing was caught on 21 June 2018 and the Danube river, where a catfish measuring and weighing was caught at Đerdap gorge in the same year), and
Greece, where this fish was introduced a few decades ago. Greek wels grow well thanks to the mild climate, lack of competition, and good food supply. The heaviest authenticated specimen, captured from the river Po by a Hungarian fisherman in 2010, weighed , although there are recent anecdotal reports of larger wels exceeding . Meanwhile, the longest wels on record was an unweighed specimen from the Po measuring , captured in 2023. The maximum total length may possibly exceed with a maximum weight of over . Such lengths are rare and unproven during the last century, but there is a somewhat credible report from the 19th century of a wels catfish of this size.
Brehms Tierleben cites Heckl's and Kner's old reports from the
Danube about specimens long and in weight, and Vogt's 1894 report of a specimen caught in
Lake Biel which was long and weighed . In 1856, K. T. Kessler wrote about specimens from the
Dnieper River which were over long and weighed up to . (According to the Hungarian naturalist
Ottó Hermann [1835-1914], catfish of 300–400 kilograms were also caught in Hungary in the old centuries from the Tisza river.) Exceptionally large specimens are rumored to attack humans in rare instances. This claim was investigated by extreme angler
Jeremy Wade in an episode of the
Animal Planet television series
River Monsters following his capture of three fish, two of about and one of , of which two attempted to attack him following their release. A report in the
Austrian newspaper
Der Standard on 5 August 2009, mentions a wels catfish dragging a fisherman near
Győr,
Hungary, under water by his right leg after he attempted to grab the fish in a hold. The man reported he barely escaped from the fish, which he estimated to have weighed over .
Diet Like most freshwater bottom feeders, the wels catfish lives on
annelid worms,
gastropods,
insects,
crustaceans and
fish. Larger specimens have also been observed to eat
crayfish,
eels,
frogs,
snakes,
rats,
voles,
coypu and aquatic
birds such as
ducks, even
cannibalising on other catfish. Researchers at the
University of Toulouse, France, in 2012 documented individuals of this species in an introduced environment lunging out of the water to feed on
pigeons at water edge. 28% of the beaching behaviour observed and filmed in this study were successful in bird capture. Stable isotope analyses of catfish stomach contents using
carbon-13 and
nitrogen-15 revealed a highly variable dietary composition of terrestrial birds. This is likely the result of adapting their behaviour to forage on novel prey in response to new environments upon its introduction to the river
Tarn in 1983 since this type of behaviour has not been reported within the native range of this species. They can also eat red worms in the fall, but only the river species. The wels catfish has also been observed taking advantage of large die-offs of
Asian clams to feed on the dead clams at the surface of the water during the daytime. This opportunistic feeding highlights the adaptability of the wels catfish to new food sources, since the species is mainly a nocturnal bottom-feeder. ==Distribution and ecology==