Warmouth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wikipedia:How to read a taxobox
How to read a taxobox
Warmouth

Conservation status
Secure
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Centrarchidae
Genus: Lepomis
Species: L. gulosus
Binomial name
Lepomis gulosus
(Cuvier, 1829)

The warmouth (Lepomis gulosus) is a species of freshwater fish. It is a member of the sunfish family (family Centrarchidae) of order Perciformes. It is native to a wide area of the United States, from Minnesota to western Pennsylvania in the north and from the Rio Grande in New Mexico east to the Atlantic in the south, inhabiting the heavily vegetated, muddy-bottomed habitats typical of the sunfishes.

The warmouth's classification is disputed. Cuvier, in 1829, originally described it as a member of the obsolete genus Pomotis, and it was reclassified much later as a member of Chaenobryttus Gill, 1864, on the basis of genetic evidence. ITIS retains this classification, with the warmouth the only member of that genus. FishBase, however, follows the majority of the sources in considering the warmouth to be a member of Lepomis, Chaenobryttus being a subgenus thereof. [1] [2]

A warmouth.
A warmouth.

The warmouth's specific epithet, gulosus, derives from the Latin gulōsus (gluttonous). The origin of the common name "warmouth" is due to the stripes around the mouth of the fish bearing a resemblance to warpaint.


[edit] References

Besides their distinctive spotted patterns, warmouths can be easily identified and distringuished from other panfish or sunfish by their proportionally large mouths. Other panfish of the same weight will have mouths 2-3 times smaller than that of the warmouth, who's oral proportions are in line with those of largemouth/black bass. It is often stated that warmouths have the body of a brim (a small common sunfish) and the head of a bass, leading to rumors that it is a man-made crossbreed.

Warmouths are also rumored to be very agrresive, and will strike at lures and baits even after being released by anglers moments before.