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Fish Diversity of Western Pennsylvania. Thanks to: Dr. Andy Turner Dept. of Biology Clarion University Clarion, PA 16214. Fish Diversity. > 25,000 species worldwide 58% Marine 41% Freshwater (9600 spp.) 1% Move back and forth (anadromous and catadromous)
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Fish Diversity of Western Pennsylvania Thanks to: Dr. Andy Turner Dept. of Biology Clarion University Clarion, PA 16214
Fish Diversity • > 25,000 species worldwide • 58% Marine • 41% Freshwater (9600 spp.) • 1% Move back and forth (anadromous and catadromous) • Diversity highest in tropics for both freshwater and marine fishes
North American Freshwater Fauna • 1061 species • Worlds most diverse temperate fauna • Pennsylvania: 159 spp. • Great Lakes: 176 spp. • French Creek: 66 spp. • Ohio’s Big Darby: 100 spp. • Ohio’s Little Miami: 84 spp.
Higher Taxonomic Organization • Superclass Agnatha - jawless fishes (lampreys, hagfishes) • Superclass Gnathostomata • Class Chondrichthyes - cartilaginous fishes (sharks, skates, rays) (800 spp.) • Grade Teleostomi -bony fishes (24,000 spp.) • Class Sarcopterygii (lobe-finned fishes) • Class Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes)
Petromyzontidae - Lamprey Chestnut lamprey
Lampreys • Key Traits: eel-like body, circular mouth in adults (oral disk), horny teeth on tongue, seven gill slits, notochord, scaleless • Diversity: five species in Laurentian Great Lakes, seven species in PA • Two-stage life-history • Parasitic and non-parasitic sister species in each genera, parasitic forms ancestral
Sturgeons • Key traits: heterocercal tail, five rows of large, bony scales (scutes), protrusable, ventral mouth, two pairs of ventral barbels in front of mouth, elongate snout, single dorsal fin placed far back near tail. • Diversity: 24 spp. Northern Hemisphere, 8 spp. North America, 4 spp. PA 5 of 8 species endangered or threatened • Long lived (White Sturgeon up to 80 years)
Sturgeons - cont. • Largest of FW fishes: White Sturgeon up to 12 ft, 1,500 lbs. • Late maturity: 5-30 years for Atlantic Sturgeon • Fecund: ovaries 25% of body weight • Commercially exploited for meat and caviar • Some species anadromous • Formerly very abundant • Hurt by declining water quality and damming of large rivers
Polyodontidae - Paddlefish Paddlefish
Paddlefish • Key Traits: Elongated, paddle shaped snout, heterocercal tail, no scales, cartilaginous skeleton • Diversity: one sp. NA, two worldwide • Large: up to 7 ft., 200 lbs • zooplanktivore, filterfeeder, fine gill rakers • long-lived, slow maturing species • large river species • currently being reintroduced into lower Allegheney
Lepisosteidae - Gar Longnose gar
Gars • Key traits: heterocercal tail, ganoid scales, jaw and face extended into a long snout, elongate body, needle-like teeth • Diversity: Seven species in Northern Hemisphere, 2 in PA • Air gulpers: swim bladder connected to esophagus • Large fish: Alligator gar to 10 ft., 300 lbs • Piscivorous, ambush predators • Ask about the chickens
Bowfin • Key traits: long dorsal fin, large mouth, massive bones covering head, cycloid scales • Diversity: 1 sp. Worldwide • Undulating dorsal fin allows backward movement • widely distributed in North America • Air gulper, tolerant of low O2 • Large, up to 1 meter length and 20 lbs • Highly developed parental care
Hiodontidae - Mooneyes Mooneye
Mooneye and Goldeye • Key traits: herring-like (laterally compressed), large eyes, teeth on tongue, dorsal fin placed far back • Diversity: two species in family, North American • Relict species • Most primitive of the teleostei • Resident of large rivers and large lakes • Nocturnal • Takes flies, good eating • Goldeye - more tolerant of turbid waters
Angullidae - Eels American eel
Eels • Key traits: snake-like shape, large mouth, pointed snout, elongate dorsal fin continuous with caudal fin • Diversity: 15 spp. worldwide, 1 in NA • Catadromous - migrate to open ocean to spawn. • Spawning ground discovered to be in Sargasso Sea in 1922. • Semelparous • Nocturnal
Clupeidae Gizzard shad
Clupeidae - Herrings • Key traits: Herring-like, laterally compressed, keeled ventral midline with sharp saw-tooth scales • Diversity: 181 spp., mostly marine, 10 freshwater, 6 spp. in PA • Examples: shads, herrings, sardines, menhaden, alwives • Huge economic importance b/c of commercial uses as people food, livestock feed, fish meal, fertilizer • Important forage fish in many systems • A few anadromous species
Superorder Ostariophysi(Minnows, Suckers, Catfishes) • Weberian Ossicles - a series of small bones that connect the inner ear to the swim bladder, aids in hearing • Ostariophysan alarm system - speciealized cells in the skin that release an alarm substance when they are ruptured
Cyprinidae - Minnows Blacknose dace
Cyprinidae - Minnows • Key Characters: soft rays, highly protrusible upper jaw, pharyngeal teeth, anal fin far relatively far forward • Diversity: 2000 species worldwide, most diverse freshwater family 302 spp. in North America • Often small fish, but not always: carp - 60 lbs. • Colorful males, elaborate nest building and courtship behaviors
Catostomidae - Suckers Shorthead redhorse
Catostomidae - Suckers • Key traits: soft-rays, ventral, protrusable mouth, anal fin relatively far back, pharyngeal teeth in a single row of > 16 • Diversity: 70 spp. in North America, 18 spp. Pennsylvania • Thick lips - papillate • Often the biomass dominant in lakes and streams
Ictaluridae - Catfishes Black bullhead
Ictaluridae - Catfishes • Key Traits: Teeth on roof of mouth, adipose fin, a spine at the front of dorsal and pectoral fins that produce a toxin in some species, no scales, small eyes, whisker-like barbels • Diversity: 37 spp., endemic to North America • Madtoms: diverse group of little catfishes, adipose fin continuous with caudal fin • Large: blue and flathead catfishes exceed 100 lbs. • Barbels serve chemosensory and tactile functions
Esocidae - Pickerels Northern pike
Esocidae - Pickerels • Key traits: extended snout, anal and dorsal fin placed far back, tail deeply forked, large mouth • Diversity: 5 spp., worldwide, all of which are commonly found in PA • voracious ambush predators • large: world record muskie: 5 1/2 feet, 70 lbs.
Umbridae (Mudminnows) Central mudminnow
Umbridae (Mudminnows) • Key traits: dark vertical bar at base of tail, cudal fin rounded, dorsal fin relatively far back • Diversity: 4 species in North America, 2 in PA • Can survive anoxic conditions, often is the sole fish species in ponds prone to winterkill
Osmeridae - Smelts Rainbow smelt
Osmeridae - Smelts • Key traits: elongate body, large mouth, adipose fin, teeth on tongue, soft rays • Diversity: one spp., rainbow smelt, an anadromous species that has been widely introduced to inland lakes • A cold water fish • Important food web effects, including a voracious predator on larval fishes
Salmonidae - Trout and Salmon Steelhead
Salmonidae - Trout and Salmon • Key traits: adipose fin, soft rays, a triangular flap at base of pelvic fin (pelvic auxillary process), gill membranes free from ventral side of head, physotomous gas bladder (connected to gut), vertical barring (parr marks) on sides of young, maxilla included in gape • Important group from aesthetic, economic, and scientific perspectives • Three subfamilies