Etheostoma simoterum (Cope, 1868) is a animal in the Percidae family, order Perciformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Etheostoma simoterum (Cope, 1868) (Etheostoma simoterum (Cope, 1868))
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Etheostoma simoterum (Cope, 1868)

Etheostoma simoterum (Cope, 1868)

Etheostoma simoterum, the snubnose darter, is a stable freshwater ray-finned darter endemic to the southeastern United States.

Family
Genus
Etheostoma
Order
Perciformes
Class

About Etheostoma simoterum (Cope, 1868)

The snubnose darter, scientifically named Etheostoma simoterum (Cope, 1868), is a species of freshwater ray-finned darter. It belongs to the subfamily Etheostomatinae, part of the family Percidae that also includes perches, ruffes, and pikeperches. This species is endemic to the southeastern United States. While there were once two recognized subspecies of the snubnose darter, there are none recognized today: the former subspecies known as the Cumberland snubnose darter has been reclassified as a full separate species, E. atripinne. Intergradation between the two original forms occurs in the lower Tennessee River unit. On average, adult snubnose darters reach a mean length of 45 millimetres (1.8 in), the species has a reported average clutch size of 152, and its maximum recorded lifespan is less than two years. Snubnose darters live in riffles and rock-bottomed pools in low-turbidity streams, more specifically they inhabit flowing bedrock or gravel-bottomed pools with moderate current in small to medium streams, and prefer habitats with no vegetation or only light algae. They are rarely found in high-turbidity water or silted substrates, and human activities including dam construction and riparian buffer destruction can increase siltation that threatens their populations. As of 2000, the snubnose darter has a conservation status of stable, meaning it has a widespread distribution and does not require immediate conservation action. Its native distribution covers the Tennessee and Cumberland River drainages in the U.S. states of Tennessee, Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama. The historical range of the originally recognized Tennessee snubnose darter (E. s. simoterum) includes the Upper and Lower Tennessee River drainage units, and this form has been introduced to both the Licking Big Sandy Creek River and the Kanawha-New-Guyandotte-Little Kanawha River. The historical range of the former Cumberland snubnose darter (now full species E. atripinne) includes the Lower Tennessee River and Cumberland River drainages, with intergradation between the two original taxa occurring in the Lower Tennessee River unit. Snubnose darters have been observed spawning in streams with water temperatures between 11 and 18 °C (52 to 64 °F). Both adult and juvenile snubnose darters are invertivorous. An examination of stomach contents from 45 individuals divided into four size classes found that midge larvae from the family Chironomidae made up the bulk of their diets. Between 80% and 100% of the examined stomachs, depending on size class, contained midge larvae. Mayfly naiads, caddisfly larvae, copepods, and cladocerans were also major components of their overall stomach contents. The highest food consumption occurs in April, which aligns with the species' spawning peak. Food consumption is much lower during months with temperature extremes and reduced activity, such as January and July. Large snubnose darters are vulnerable to internal parasitism by flukes and nematodes. They are also affected by external parasites including the black spot disease caused by Metacercariae flukes and piscicolid leeches.

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

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Perciformes Percidae Etheostoma

More from Percidae

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

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