Largescale Stoneroller
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The largescale stoneroller (''Campostoma oligolepis'') is a
fish Fish are aquatic, craniate, gill-bearing animals that lack limbs with digits. Included in this definition are the living hagfish, lampreys, and cartilaginous and bony fish as well as various extinct related groups. Approximately 95% of li ...
in the family
Cyprinidae Cyprinidae is a family of freshwater fish commonly called the carp or minnow family. It includes the carps, the true minnows, and relatives like the barbs and barbels. Cyprinidae is the largest and most diverse fish family and the largest verte ...
native to the eastern United States.


Geographic distribution

The largescale stoneroller is found natively in many of North American streams, rivers, lakes, and creeks. It is native to the Upper Mississippi River and Lake Michigan drainages of Wisconsin, eastern Minnesota, eastern Iowa, and northern Illinois; Ozarkian streams of central and southern Missouri, and northern Arkansas; Mobile Bay drainage, Georgia, Alabama, and eastern Mississippi; parts of Green, Cumberland, and Tennessee River drainages of Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama It has also been introduced into other areas in North America like the Illinois River in Oklahoma. It is thought that the reason for their introduction into the Oklahoma is due to the fact that it is a popular baitfish, and has effects on this area in ways that have not been noticed by scientist and researchers. The largescale stoneroller ranges from Alabama to Oklahoma.


Ecology

The largescale stoneroller inhabits well-oxygenated waters with temperatures around 46-32 degrees Fahrenheit, with low turbulence and a reduced flow of water. It prefers upland habitats above the Fall Line. It is a herbivorous fish which eats diatoms, green algae, and blue-green bacteria, with a tendency to ingest less sand and silt than the central stoneroller. The largescale stoneroller's predators include large and smallmouth bass, the spotted bass, sager, and the walleye. It is a popular baitfish so anglers also catch them for fishing. The largescale stoneroller can tolerate waters that are polluted and therefore it does not have many competing species.


Life cycle

Largescale stoneroller generally reach sexual maturity at one to four years of age. The breeding process starts with the males constructing the nest in gravel bars and rocks in the late winter. The females then come in the spring and lay the eggs while the males fertilize them. A female can lay anywhere from four hundred to four thousand eggs at one time. After breeding, both male and female leave the nest unattended and let the fry hatch and fend for themselves. The fry stay together and form a school and eat and protect one another. The largescale stoneroller has a life expectancy of around five years.


Management

The largescale stoneroller is not currently on the federal/ state endangered or threatened list. It was discovered in the Illinois River in Oklahoma (middle Arkansas drainage) and may have been introduced there Burr, B.M., and R.C. Cashner. 1983. Campostoma pauciradii, a new cyprinid fish from southeastern United States, with a review of related forms. Copeia 1983(1):101-116. Even though it was introduced there it still has to show any kind of positive or negative effect on the biotic and a biotic life in that area.


References


Further reading

*Etnier, D., W. Starnes. 1993. The Fishes of Tennessee. Knoxville, Tennessee: The University of Tennessee Press. *Smith, P.W. 1979. Fishes of Illinois. University of Illinois Press. Champaign, Illinois. *
FishBase FishBase is a global species database of fish species (specifically finfish). It is the largest and most extensively accessed online database on adult finfish on the web.

"''Campostoma oligolepis'' Hubbs and Greene, 1935"
{{Taxonbar, from=Q5028525 Campostoma Fish described in 1935 Freshwater fish of North America