قراءة كتاب Geographic Variation in the North American Cyprinid Fish, Hybopsis gracilis
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Geographic Variation in the North American Cyprinid Fish, Hybopsis gracilis
not at Mora (temperatures below 70° F.). In the Purgatoire River, a thriving population was found where the water temperature was 92° F., on September 6, 1959. In the Arkansas and Pecos rivers and the Rio Grande this subspecies is most abundant below the mountainous parts of the stream-courses, but at elevations higher than 4,000 feet on the plains.
In the Pecos and Arkansas basins, species commonly taken with H. g. gulonella are Catostomus commersonnii, Hybognathus placita, Notropis lutrensis lutrensis, Notropis stramineus missuriensis, Pimophales promelas, and Campostoma anomalum plumbeum. The only spiny-rayed fishes that we have found with H. g. gulonella are Lepomis cyanellus and L. humilis, both of which are scarce. Associates of H. g. gracilis include the same species, plus other ostariophysan fishes such as species of Carpiodes, Ictiobus, and silt-adapted species of Hybopsis and Notropis.
We failed to find the flathead chub at any of 11 localities in the South Platte drainage, where we collected in September, 1959. Dr. George Baxter, of the Department of Zoology, University of Wyoming, told us that he has never found H. gracilis in that drainage. The fauna of the South Platte includes Catostomus catostomus, Semotilus atromaculatus, Hybopsis biguttata, Hybognathus hankinsoni, Notropis cornutus frontalis, Etheostoma nigrum and E. exile--species rarely if ever found with H. gracilis.
Ecologically, H. g. gulonella seems to be the counterpart of Semotilus atromaculatus in streams where the latter species is absent. Observations of H. g. gulonella in the Purgatoire River indicated that loosely-organized groups of flathead chubs congregated one to four inches above the bottom of pools, and near or under protective cover such as roots of vegetation or debris lodged against shore. Individuals moved about independently within the group (rather than as schools), and occasionally rose to the surface, perhaps for food.
The flathead chub is chiefly carnivorous, but its food includes some aquatic vegetation (Table 1). Most organisms found in specimens (both subspecies) were terrestrial insects (Coleoptera, Diptera, Orthoptera); all insects were adult stages, except those designated as larvae in Table 1. Roundworms probably were parasites, rather than food.
Hubbs (1927:76) states that the food of young flathead chubs that were obtained from the Arkansas River System in New Mexico consisted "almost entirely of crustaceans (small ostracods and cladocerans to the exclusion of all else but an occasional larval or adult insect, etc.)."
Specimens of H. g. gulonella that have been examined reach sexual maturity at approximately 65 mm standard length. Most specimens of H. g. gracilis less than 85 mm in standard length are immature, but larger specimens probably are mature.
The spawning season is in late summer, beginning in July and extending into September. Specimens from the Peace River, collected on August 10, 1952, include females that were mostly spent and tuberculate males. Males and females in spawning condition were collected in the Milk River in August of 1955. A large prespawning female was obtained in Red Deer River in June of 1952. A male from Fort McMurray had fairly well developed tubercles on August 9, 1955. A prespawning female was taken from the Saskatchewan River at Clarkboro Ferry on June 7, 1957. Tuberculate males were collected in the Powder River on June 30, 1957. Specimens from the White River in South Dakota, collected on July 7, 1934, include tuberculate males. The specimens discussed above are H. g. gracilis or intergrades tending toward that subspecies.
Specimens of H. g. gulonella collected in the Arkansas River at Pueblo and Florence, Colorado, on September 7, 1959, include some tuberculate males, although most females are spent. On August 8, 1957, a series of flathead chubs that includes tuberculate males was collected in the Redwater River, Montana. In the Pecos River on August 25, 1958, spawning seemingly had been completed, although a few males still bore tubercles.
Table 1. Organisms Found in Stomachs of Hybopsis gracilis From Various Locations, Expressed as Percentage of Total Volume.
S. Saskatchewan R., Clarkboro Ferry, Sask. | B: Milk R., Alberta | Missouri R., S. D. | Missouri R., Neb. | Arkansas R., Fremont Co., Colo. | Arkansas R., Pueblo Co., Colo. | Pecos R., San Miguel Co., N. M. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. specimens examined | 1 | 7 | 6 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 |
No. specimens containing food | 1 | 6 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 7 |
Kind of Organism | |||||||
Aphasmidia | 10.0 | 00.7 | ..... | 03.0 | ..... | ..... | ..... |
Arthropoda | |||||||
Araneae | |||||||
Argiopidae | ..... | ..... | ..... | ..... | 04.0 | ..... | ..... |
Theridiidae | ..... | ..... | ..... | ..... | 04.0 | ..... | ..... |
Insecta |