Big-scale sand smelt

Big-scale sand smelt
A shoal of Atherina boyeri
Conservation status

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Atheriniformes
Family: Atherinidae
Genus: Atherina
Species: A. boyeri
Binomial name
Atherina boyeri
A. Risso, 1810
Synonyms
  • Atherina anterina Nardo, 1847
  • Atherina boïeri Risso, 1810
  • Atherina bonapartei non Boulenger, 1907
  • Atherina bonapartii Boulenger, 1907
  • Atherina boyeri caspia Eichwald, 1831
  • Atherina caspia Eichwald, 1838
  • Atherina hyalosoma Cocco, 1885
  • Atherina lacustris Bonaparte, 1836
  • Atherina mochon Cuvier, 1829
  • Atherina mochon aegyptia Boulenger, 1907
  • Atherina mochon pontica Eichwald, 1831
  • Atherina mochon riqueti Roule, 1902
  • Atherina pontica Eichwald, 1831
  • Atherina presbyter caspia Eichwald, 1831
  • Atherina presbyter pontica Eichwald, 1831
  • Atherina riqueti Roule, 1902
  • Atherina risso Valenciennes, 1835
  • Atherina rissoi Günther, 1861
  • Atherina sarda Valenciennes, 1835
  • Atherina sardinella Fowler, 1903
  • Hepsetia boyeri (Risso, 1810)
  • Hepsetia mochon (Cuvier, 1829)

The big-scale sand smelt (Atherina boyeri) is a species of fish in the Atherinidae family.[1] It is a euryhaline amphidromous fish, up to 20 cm in length.

Description

It is a small pelagic fish species which occurs near the surface in the littoral estuarine zone: in lagoons, salt marshes (77 psu), shallow brackish areas (2 psu) and inland waters which are rather unsuitable for other fish species, due to their high ionic strength and salinity.

Body is rather long, slender, moderately flattened. Eyes are large. Head and body are scaly. Mouth is protractible, upwardly directed, with small teeth. Lower jaw has an upper expansion within mouth (high dentary bone). There are two separate dorsal fins, with all rays of first and 1-2 anterior rays of second dorsal fin being unsegmented. The anal fin is similar to the second dorsal fin, while the caudal fin is forked. The first dorsal fin has 6-10 flexible spines.[2]

It is a carnivorous species feeding on zoo-plankton and small bottom-living animals (crustacean gammarids, polychaete worms and molluscs).

Range

It is found in the eastern Atlantic from Portugal and Spain to Nouadhibou (Mauritania) and Madeira.[3] Also it occurs in the Mediterranean, including the inshore lagoons, such as Trasimeno in Italy, Hyères in the southern France such as Marseille and Lake Qarun in Egypt;[4] an isolated population is found near the coasts of England and the Netherlands. In the Black Sea, it is widespread along all coasts, in lagoons and estuaries, in the downstreams of rivers Danube, Dniester, Southern Bug, Inhulets, and Dnieper, with a permanent population is in the Kakhovka Reservoir.[5]

The isolated population in the Caspian Sea is characterised as subspecies A. b. caspia (Eichwald, 1838).

Atherina boyeri from the brackish lagoon in Grosseto Province, Tuscany, Italy

Fishing

The major small-scale fishing gears exploiting this species are coastal beach seines, small mesh size (10 mm) gill nets and lift-nets. It is often used as bait fish on small and medium longlines, handlines, fishing using rods and reels, as trolling bait, even as bait in fish traps.

Gastronomy

This small fish is appreciated in the Catalan, Occitan, Turkish, and Greek cuisines. The fish are lightly powdered with wheat flour before being fried in hot olive oil.

References

  1. World Conservation Monitoring Centre 1996. Atherina boyeri. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 4 August 2007.
  2. Review of Croatian selected scientific literature on species mostly exploited by the national small-scale fisheries on FAOAdriaMed.org
  3. Atherina boyeri at FishBase
  4. Fishes of the North-eastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean, Vol. 3., (Eds.:) Whitehead P.J.P., Bauchot M.-L., Hureau J.-C., Nielsen J., Tortonese E., Paris, UNESCO, 1986.
  5. Movchan Yu.V. (1988) True loaches, catfishes, canal catfishes, freshwater eels, congers, needlefishes, cods, sticklebacks, syngnathids, mosquitofishes, zeids, barracudas, grey mullets, old world silversides, cusk eels [in:] Fauna of Ukraine, Vol. 8, No 3, Kiev: Naukova Dumka, 399 pp. (in Russian).