Percina westfalli (Fowler, 1942) is a animal in the Percidae family, order Perciformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Percina westfalli (Fowler, 1942) (Percina westfalli (Fowler, 1942))
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Percina westfalli (Fowler, 1942)

Percina westfalli (Fowler, 1942)

Percina westfalli is a benthic insectivorous darter species native to freshwater habitats of the Southeastern United States.

Family
Genus
Percina
Order
Perciformes
Class

About Percina westfalli (Fowler, 1942)

Percina westfalli, commonly known as the sooty-banded darter or Westfall's darter, is a species of darter that belongs to the subfamily Etheostomatinae. This species is native to the Southeastern United States. It is a benthic fish that typically inhabits streams and smaller rivers with sand or gravel bottoms, and it is primarily insectivorous. In the Apalachicola Basin, P. westfalli lives in sympatry with P. crypta. After its initial formal description, this species was later synonymized with P. nigrofasciata. It has since been separated back out and is once again recognized as a full distinct species, though many existing sources have not yet updated their materials to reflect this reclassification. On the Gulf Slope, the range of P. westfalli extends eastward starting from the Apalachicola river basin. On the Atlantic Slope, its range runs from the Savannah river basin south to the St. Johns river basin. Before this species was split from P. nigrofasciata, sources recorded the former parent taxon P. nigrofasciata as absent from the Satilla and St. Mary's river systems in Georgia and Florida. While P. westfalli is considered common across most of its range, it is thought to be rare in the Altamaha River.

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

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Perciformes Percidae Percina

More from Percidae

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

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