.Don't listen to any of the other answers you have gotten before this here is how you reallycatch a alligator gar.First you will need a 0/6 sized hook if you want a big one any thing over 150 pounds any thing under 90 you should use 0/3 next get at least a 10 inch long steel leiter .Don't use any line under 30 pound test line next make sure you use a long thick rod and a big game reel if you don't you will brake your pole and reel .After you fix that up you need to use one of these baites crappie,brim,crawfish,or bacon .and one last thing alligator gar are not in the amazon thye are in the U.S. mainely tennsese , Mississippi ,Alabama and Louisiana. P.S. the reason you should believe a word i,m telling you is because it is a proven technique and design in fact i will be useing it to catch a 200 pounder this monday.One last tip not if but WHEN you hook a alligator gar set your reel to full drag and tire him out before you bring him in because if he has any energy left you or whoever you were fishing with will get seriously hurt p.s. always alligator gar fish with atleast 2 people one to catch the fish and another to club or shoot the fish.
The best way is to call a professional to do it.
Cut its spinal cord. That is the quickest and most painless way . Jump on top of it, pin it, and with a knife, cut it open and slice through the cord
With a gun.
A large shark would be a great predator of the alligator gar. Bull sharks can take down a giant alligator gar easily. Alligators and crocodiles can eat alligator gars if they catch them. Alligator snapping turtles can catch small alligator gars, and will only eat dead giant alligator gars.
no, you should keep your alligator gar with your fishes or else your alligator gar will eat them.
No, but Lake Norman, NC, has the longnose gar, a relative of the alligator gar.
alligator gar cause its awsome like that
Alligator gar lose the spotting as they age.
No, but there is an alligator gar.
The alligator gar is found in rivers and lakes of the southern U.S.
The scientific name of an alligator gar is Atractosteus spatula.
no
Yes, the alligator gar is a fish; it's called an alligator gar because it is a big fish which has a long, narrow but very toothy jaw which looks like the jaw of an alligator. Alligators themselves, of course, are reptiles
No, they are fish, and alligators are reptiles..The name comes from the fact the alligator gar's head resembles an alligator, hence the name.
Gars are often eaten by alligators and large water birds. Alligator snapping turtles will catch and eat alligator gars on occasion.