Channel darter
Channel darter | |
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Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Actinopterygii |
Order: | Perciformes |
Family: | Percidae |
Subfamily: | Etheostomatinae |
Genus: | Percina |
Species: | P. copelandi |
Binomial name | |
Percina copelandi (Jordan, 1877) | |
The channel darter (Percina copelandi) is a species of fish in the perch family, Percidae, and the subfamily Etheostomatinae. This species is listed as threatened by the Canadian Species at Risk Act (SARA).
Description
This is a small-sized fish between 34 and 61 mm in total length; some specimens as large as 72 mm. It is light sand or olive in colour with brown speckles on its back. A dark spot or bar may be present below the eye and extending onto the snout 8 to 18 brown oblong blotches along the lateral line linked by a thin brown line. The spawning male turns dusky with a blackish head. The fins are clear or lightly speckled and the first spiny dorsal fin usually has 11 rays.
The channel darter most resembles the river darter (Percina shumardi). It can be distinguished from the johnny darter (Etheostoma nigrum) and the tesselated darter (E. olmstedi), which have only one anal spine instead of two. It differs from the blackside darter (P. maculata) in usually having 11 rays on the first spiny dorsal fin instead of 13 to 14.
Distribution
The fish is native to North America, where it has a highly localized distribution. It is uncommon in Canada but disjunct populations can be found in Ontario and Quebec. In Ontario, it is found in Little Rideau Creek, in tributaries of the Bay of Quinte, and in Lakes Erie and St. Clair. Along the Huron-Erie corridor, it has been collected from the St. Clair and Detroit Rivers. In Quebec, it occurs in some tributaries of the St. Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers. In the United States, the channel darter is more common, occurring in the Ohio and lower Mississippi basins.
Habitat and life history
The channel darter prefers pools and riffles of small- to medium-sized rivers, but can also be found in shallow, slow current areas of large rivers. Substrate preferences include sand, gravel or rock. This fish has also been found in lakes along sand and gravel beaches where wave action is gentle and the current slow. Communal spawning occurs in the spring and early summer in upstream areas with moderate to fast current and over fine gravel or small rocks. Males establish breeding territories. Females spawn with successive males and lay 4 to 10 eggs in each nest; 350 to 700 eggs in total. There is no parental care.
Diet
The channel darter is a benthic feeder, consuming insects that live on the substrate such as mayfly and midge larvae. It also eats algae and detritus.
Conservation
This fish is threatened by habitat loss due to sedimentation and deteriorating water quality from agricultural and urban development. In addition, activities which impede or slow water flow during spawning are a threat to the survival of this species. The introduced round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) may also compete with the channel darter for space and resources and is a potential predator of eggs.
Sources
- Scott and Crossman 1998; Phelps and Francis 2002 (COSEWIC Status Report). Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada, DFO/2005-860, Cat. No. Fs22-4/40-2005E-PDF ISBN 0-662-41520-5 DFO. 2010. Recovery potential assessment of Channel Darter (Percina copelandi) in Canada. DFO Can. Sci. Advis. Sec. Sci. Advis. Rep. 2010/058.
- NatureServe 2013. Percina copelandi. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2014.2. Downloaded on 25 August 2014.
- Froese, R. and D. Pauly, Eds. Percina copelandi. FishBase. 2011.