1 / 16

Michigan Fishes

Michigan Fishes. 23 October 2012. Michigan Fishes. Michigan dominates Great Lakes watershed Shoreline = 3,288 miles (2 nd to Alaska) Over 35,000 inland lakes and 36,350 miles of rivers Of 172 Great Lakes species, 153 found in Michigan. Species List.

althea
Download Presentation

Michigan Fishes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Michigan Fishes 23 October 2012

  2. Michigan Fishes • Michigan dominates Great Lakes watershed • Shoreline = 3,288 miles (2nd to Alaska) • Over 35,000 inland lakes and 36,350 miles of rivers • Of 172 Great Lakes species, 153 found in Michigan

  3. Species List Ictaluridae: Ictaluruspunctatus– channel catfish Salmonidae: Salvelinusfontinalis – brook trout Oncorhynchusmykiss– rainbow trout Salmotrutta– brown trout Sciaenidae: Aplodinotusgrunniens– freshwater drum Gasterosteidae: Culaeainconstans– brook stickleback Amiidae: Amiacalva– bowfin Clupeidae:Dorosomacepedianum– gizzard shad Percopsidae: Percopsisomiscomaycus – trout-perch Aphredoderidae: Aphredoderussayanus – pirate perch Lotidae: Lotalota– burbot Moronidae: Moronechrysops– white bass Atherinopsidae: Labidesthessicculus – brook silverside

  4. Ictaluridae Catfishes: family characteristics • Four pairs of barbels • No scales • Adipose fin present • Stout spines in dorsal and pectoral fins Ictaluruspunctatus– channel catfish • Deeply forked tail • Tail usually with dark margin • Usually dark spots on sides 35 lb CO state record

  5. Salmonidae Trouts: family characteristics • Body terete to moderately compressed • Single soft-rayed dorsal fin, adipose fin present • Cycloid scales on body, head naked • 18 total Michigan species Salvelinusfontinalis: brook trout • Head, back, and dorsal fin vermiculated • Side with light spots (often blue and red in life) • Leading edge of lower fins white with black inner edge • Caudal fin truncate or shallowly forked

  6. Salmonidae Trouts: family characteristics • Body terete to moderately compressed • Single soft-rayed dorsal fin, adipose fin present • Cycloid scales on body, head naked • 18 total Michigan species Oncorhynchusmykiss: rainbow trout • Oncorhynchus = hooked nose • Back, top of head, dorsal and caudal fins with many small black spots • Usually pink stripe along side • Adipose usually spotted with black margin

  7. Salmonidae Trouts: family characteristics • Body terete to moderately compressed • Single soft-rayed dorsal fin, adipose fin present • Cycloid scales on body, head naked • 18 total Michigan species Salmotrutta: brown trout • Lightish brown background color • Side with many orange and red spots • Adipose orange without black margin

  8. Sciaenidae Drums: family characteristics • Body compressed and deep • Highly arched lateral line that extends to end of rounded caudal • Two dorsal fins, pelvic fins with one spine, anal fin with two • Ctenoid scales • Snout blunt with almost horizontal mouth Aplodinotusgrunniens: freshwater drum • Only species in Michigan • Strongly nocturnal • Large grooved otoliths used to estimate age and migrations

  9. Gasterosteidae Sticklebacks: family characteristics • Series of free dorsal spines • Body elongate and compressed • Caudal peduncle slender, naked or with bony plates • Anal fin with single strong spine Culaeainconstans: brook stickleback • Dorsal spines 5 or 6 • Caudal peduncle deeper than wide, without keel

  10. Amiidae Bowfins: family characteristics • Bony (gular) plate between lower jaw bones • Single long dorsal fin • Cycloid scales • Caudal fin abbreviate heterocercal Amiacalva: bowfin • A.k.a. dogfish, grinnel • Black spot at caudal fin base • Mottled coloration • Similar to burbot, mudminnow • Only species in this family • Gulp air when oxygen is low

  11. Clupeidae Herrings and shads: family characteristics • Body compressed • Single dorsal fin, no adipose fin • Thin cycloid scales, head naked (scaleless) • Spiny scutes on midline of belly • No lateral line Dorosomacepedianum: gizzard shad • Posterior ray of dorsal fin elongated • Dorsal fin starts behind pelvic fin insertion • Snout rounded, mouth subterminal • Dark spot behind operculum

  12. Percopsidae Trout-perches: family characteristics • Body slender with mod. sized ctenoid scales • Jaws with villiform teeth • Head naked, nostrils narrowly separated • Adipose fin present, caudal deeply forked Percopsisomiscomaycus: trout-perch • Small silvery fish • Dark spots down lateral line • Dorsal and anal fin each with spine • One of only two species in genus

  13. Aphredoderidae Pirate perches: family characteristics • Body oblong, heavy forward • Villiform teeth • Caudal fin truncate • Genital aperture and anus migrates forward to throat in adult Aphredoderussayanus: pirate perch • Only species in Michigan • Body dark slate color • Distinct dark caudal bar • Often dark teardrop • 3 dorsal and 2 anal fin spines

  14. Lotidae Hakes and burbots: family characteristics • One to three dorsal fins • Chin barbel • Caudal fin rounded Lotalota: burbot • Dorsal, caudal, anal fins separate • Pelvic fins jugular • Mottled coloration all over body • Similar to American eel • Only species in genus

  15. Moronidae Temperate basses: family characteristics • Two separate or narrowly joined dorsal fins • Shallowly forked caudal • 3 spines in anal fin • Opercular spine (separates from Centrarchidae) Moronechrysops: white bass • Anal spines graduated in length (1st shortest, 3rd longest) • Distinct stripes on body

  16. Atherinopsidae Silversides: family characteristics • Body elongate, terete • Superior mouth • Many small scales • Silver lateral stripe • 2 dorsal fins Labidesthessicculus: brook silverside • Mouth formed into short beak • 1st dorsal fin very small • Long anal fin

More Related