Shell-shocked: Carp fisherman catches Mississippi snapping turtle in British lake



When fisherman Drew Hammonds saw a spiky armour-plated creature at the end of his line, he made a snap decision.

He dropped his rod and started to run. But after a quick look back he realised he had landed a snapping turtle.

And being so far from its native U.S., it was very snappy indeed.

Monster of the deep: The snapping turtle caught by Drew Hammonds



Mr Hammonds, 37, caught the turtle early last Tuesday while fishing with friends at Earlswood Lake near Birmingham.

‘I only went fishing for carp,’ he said. ‘I thought I’d caught a big one when my rod started to bend.

‘Then I spotted a big shell coming out of the water, with spikes on its back.

‘My first instinct was to run, as I thought it was a crocodile or an alligator. I dropped my rod and ran, then I turned back and realised it was a turtle.

‘I was with four of my friends and they were just as stunned.

Surprised: Mr Hammonds at Earlswood Lake in Birmingham



‘It was hissing and spitting when we caught it - it was really vicious. You couldn’t go anywhere near it without it going for you.

‘It ripped through my net and my friend’s net.’ Worried that the turtle was hurt, the men tried to remove the hook in its mouth before putting it back in the water.

‘We had to get close to it because it had a hook in its lower jaw,’ Mr Hammonds said.



‘It kept snapping at me so I had to be careful. In the end I used metal forceps to cut through the hook. I had to do it quickly, because it was going for my hand.’

Turtle specialist Paul Eversfield identifiedthe creature as an alligator snapping turtle (macroclemys temminckii).



Mr Eversfield, from the British Chelonia Society, said the turtles were native to the southern states of the U.S.

Petrified: Mr Hammonds tries to approach the aggressive turtle



He said the creature Mr Hammonds caught was probably imported as a hatchling for a British collector before escaping or being dumped.

‘They are potentially the largest freshwater turtles in the world with record size of over 100kg,’ he said.

‘As such, they represent the top predator in their natural environment and are capable of eating large fish and water fowl. Their natural diet is fish, crayfish, and smaller turtles.

‘Having been around, largely unchanged for nearly 200 million years, their survival strategy obviously works very well.

‘They would not pose much of a threat to humans unless someone was foolish enough to handle them incorrectly. Their powerful jaws are easily capable of severing a finger or hand.’

Mr Hammonds said: ‘In the past they have closed and drained this pool following sightings of a mysterious creature which people thought was an alligator or a crocodile. Maybe it was this that they had been seeing.’

Released: After removing the hook, the turtle was returned to the lake

