Cottus carolinae (Gill, 1861) is a animal in the Cottidae family, order Scorpaeniformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Cottus carolinae (Gill, 1861) (Cottus carolinae (Gill, 1861))
🦋 Animalia

Cottus carolinae (Gill, 1861)

Cottus carolinae (Gill, 1861)

Cottus carolinae, the banded sculpin, is a freshwater benthic fish native to the United States that faces habitat threats but is not endangered.

Family
Genus
Cottus
Order
Scorpaeniformes
Class

About Cottus carolinae (Gill, 1861)

The banded sculpin, with the scientific name Cottus carolinae (Gill, 1861), is a freshwater fish that lives mostly in small to moderate-sized streams with swift current. Young and juvenile banded sculpins are mainly found in pools, riffles, and other shallow habitats, while adults tend to prefer deeper water. This species primarily eats insects and insect larvae, but its large mouth lets it consume prey nearly as large as itself, including other sculpins. To avoid being preyed on by other fish, the banded sculpin’s color and pattern usually match its surrounding environment. Most banded sculpins are mottled brown with dark vertical banding, and typically grow to around three inches in length. They have a broad head that quickly narrows into a slim body, giving them the appearance of a mature tadpole. Cottus carolinae is useful as a representative species for studying the effects of mining on fish communities, because its population density has been found to be negatively correlated with higher metal concentrations from mining. In other areas around the Cumberland Basin, as a benthic fish, the banded sculpin is threatened by increased siltation caused by local farming. While the species faces these threats, it is not yet listed as an endangered species. Cottus carolinae is a freshwater species found only within the United States. This wide-ranging species occurs in eastern North America west of the Appalachians and south of the Ohio River Valley. Its range extends as far south as the mountain streams of Alabama, but the species prefers the cooler streams of the mid to northern United States. The banded sculpin usually lives in cool, running streams and rivers. It is a benthic species that prefers stream beds made of sand, bedrock, stones, or boulders. The species shows size-specific habitat segregation: most adults live in stream and river pools, while young-of-the-year individuals inhabit riffles. Most streams occupied by the banded sculpin are less than two meters deep, with a current velocity between 0.1 and 0.7 meters per second, with a standard deviation of ±0.2 meters per second. The species is sometimes found in caves, but these individuals generally resemble aboveground populations and may only be occasional visitors. One apparently cave-adapted individual that lacked pigmentation but had normal-sized eyes has been reported from a cave in West Virginia. Other, better-documented cave-adapted populations from Missouri, which show adaptations in both pigmentation and eyes, were formerly included in this species, but were reclassified as the separate species grotto sculpin (Cottus specus) in 2013. The banded sculpin is intolerant to habitat changes, and its range has been reduced by the effects of pollution. The largest pollutant threat to Cottus carolinae habitat is siltation of rivers and streams. Additionally, water contaminants such as mining-derived metals in parts of Missouri have posed a severe enough threat to local populations that their numbers have decreased in those areas.

Photo: (c) justinoid, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by justinoid · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Scorpaeniformes Cottidae Cottus

More from Cottidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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