An Indigenous woman made a chance discovery on the end of a fishing line earlier this year when she hooked a rare sawfish in remote NT.
The 2.7 metre long threatened species was initially frightening to the woman who had no idea what she had netted, reported the ABC.
Known as ‘kunpulu’ in Gurindji langue, Wattie Creek located 800 kilometres south of Darwin is home to the sawfish.Biologist Peter Kyne from Charles Darwin University and Indigenous ranger Philip Jimmy went to the site of where the woman caught the fish.
Philip Jimmy and Dr Peter Kyne measure the rostrum from the sawfish caught by Lisa Smiler in early 2017. Source: Supplied: Felicity Meakins
Mr Kyne said there had been no prior understanding of sawfish being able to come so far inland.
“This is the furthest inland that sawfish have ever been recorded in Australia,” he said.
The fish is extinct in 80 countries where it was once found and now exists in three areas.
Indigenous ranger, Philip Jimmy said as a teenager he saw rock art replicating what he believes is kunpulu at Revolver Creek.He believes hunters would mark the rock to remind themselves of the fish’s existence in the area.
Rock art of a sawfish found on Revolver Creek, a tributary of the Victoria River, near Kalkaringi. Source: Supplied: Felicity Meakins
A linguist has been brought in to work with local Aboriginal people in the area to find out more history of the kunpulu.
The information obtained is then used by the Federal Government to plan the management of the remote habitation.