Aphredoderus sayanus
pirate perch
Type Locality
Fishponds, Harrowgate,
“Philadelphia”, Pennsylvania (Gilliams 1824).
Etymology/Derivation of Scientific Name
From the Greek aphod,
meaning “excrement,” and dere, meaning “throat,” from the position of
the anus; sayanus, named for Thomas Say, an entomologist (Pflieger
1997).
Synonymy
Scolopsis sayanus
Gilliams 1824:81
Aphredoderus sayanus
Hay 1881:501, 1883:64; Hildebrand and Towers 1928:125; Cook 1959:160 (Ross
2001).
Characters
Maximum size: 144 mm
TL (Lee 1980).
Coloration: Monotone
tan to black dorsally, black speckles on white abdomen; black bar on distal
end of caudal peduncle; intense black pigments in fins. Live individuals
with purple sheen. Both breeding males and females iridescent, predominate
coloration violet and purple, occasionally light copper, green, or silver;
at times breeding adults are black or nearly black (Hardy 1978).
Counts: Specimens
from the Sabine River, Gulf Coast of Texas,
and Red River had counts ranging from 2-3 anal fin spines, 3-4 dorsal fin
spines, 10-14 dorsal fin rays; 10-13 pectoral fin rays, and 43-56 lateral
line scales (Boltz and Stauffer 1993). 6-7 anal rays (Mansueti 1963).
Body shape: Body more
or less cylindrical, blunt forward, somewhat compressed behind (Hardy 1978).
Mouth position:
Terminal (Goldstein and Simon 1999).
External morphology:
Vent and urogenital tract of larval fish originally located immediately
anterior to anal fin, migrating forward until reaching the jugular position
in adult fish (Mansueti 1963). Single dorsal fin with both spines and rays;
opercle with sharp spine; edge of preoprecle strongly serrate; lateral line
incomplete or absent (Hardy 1978); ctenoid scales on body and cheeks (Smith
1979).
Internal morphology:
Ratio of digestive tract to total length: DT 1.2-1.6 TL (Goldstein and Simon
1999). Jaws, vomers, palatines, and pterygoids covered with fine rows of
teeth (Hardy 1978).
Distribution (Native and Introduced)
U.S. distribution:
Ranges widely through the Atlantic slope, Gulf Coast, and
Mississippi Valley streams (Hubbs
et al. 1991).
Texas distribution:
Primarily in eastern Texas from the Red River southward through the lower
Brazos Basin (Hubbs et al. 1991). Warren et al. (2000) listed the following
drainage units for distribution of Aphredoderus sayanus in the state:
Red River (from the mouth upstream to and including the Kiamichi River),
Sabine Lake (including minor coastal drainages west to Galveston Bay),
Galveston Bay (including minor coastal drainages west to mouth of Brazos
River), Brazos River, Colorado River.
Abundance/Conservation status (Federal, State, NGO)
Currently stable in southern
drainages (Warren et al. 2000). McLane (1955) noted that the species was
relatively rare at any given locality, except during periods of low water
when as many as 24 specimens were found concentrated in small weedy pools of
Florida swamps (St. Johns River system).
Habitat Associations
Macrohabitat: Lakes,
ponds, quiet pools and backwaters of low gradient streams (Lee 1980).
Mesohabitat:
Backwaters of low gradient streams with mud or sandy substrates; usually
associated with aquatic plants and organic debris mud to sand bottoms
(Gunning and Lewis 1955; Lee 1980), in
situations where there is much protection from currents, wave and wind
action (McLane 1955). In Village Creek (Neches River, Texas), species
preferred shallow water with macrophytes and leaf litter; collected from the
channel edge during summer and from backwaters during fall (Moriarty and
Winemiller 1997). Habitat indicator type for this species in the Sulphur
River, Texas: pool, pool-bank snag, pool-channel snag, pool-snag complex,
pool-edge, pool-vegetation (Gelwick and Morgan 2000; Osting et al. 2003). In
southern Illinois, this species was found in low-gradient, muddy areas
having much woody debris (in ditches) to small, clear streams with rocky
substrates; typical hiding places were undercut banks with root masses, but
A. sayanus was also found under rocks (Poly and Wetzel 2003).
Occupied highly vegetated areas possessing fine substrata and slow current
speeds, in Black Creek, southestern Mississippi (Ross et al. 1987).
Collected in heavily vegetated, calm or gently flowing waters, in Tennessee
(Parker and Simco 1975). In headwater coastal plain streams of central
Louisiana, fish were associated with woody debris; selecting woody cover
types characterized by pools, undercut banks, and leaves (both benthic and
suspended), during daylight hours in the summer (Monzyk et al. 1997). Larval
fish <14 mm TL were collected in limnetic areas in the Atchafalaya River
Basin, Louisiana (Fontenot and Rutherford 1999). Species occasionally enters
brackish water (Hardy 1978), and has been recorded at maximum salinity of
10.15 ppt (Keup and Bayless 1964).
Biology
Spawning season: In
Florida, October – December (McLane 1955). Major spawning period in the
Atchafalaya River Basin, Louisiana, is February – March (12.6-22.8°C;
Fontenot and Rutherford 1999). Murdy and Wortham (1980) reported spawning
during the first two weeks of April, in Virginia. In southern Illinois,
females were gravid in March, April, and early May, and eggs and larvae were
present in April to early May (Poly and Wetzel 2003). Spawning occurs
throughout May, in Illinois (Forbes and Richardson 1908; Smith 1979; Hardy
1978).
Spawning habitat: Eggs
were found in masses of fine tree roots, in streams (Poly and Wetzel 2003).
In aquaria, species preferred soft, fibrous materials, especially aquarium
filter media, but also deposited eggs in detritus; eggs were deposited in
gravel only when other substrates were not available (Poly and Wetzel 2003).
Poly and Wetzel (2003) placed A. sayanus in a newly-named guild,
“phytophils” [plant spawners; A.2.1 in Balon (1981) classification], defined
by gametes being injected into interstitial spaces of a substrate matrix,
including detritus, root masses, and possibly other vegetation. Fletcher et
al. (2004) reported that A. sayanus deposited and fertilized eggs in
underwater root masses of primarily woody riparian plants and occasionally
of aquatic macrophytes. Species previously thought to be a gill chamber
brooder, with the female releasing the eggs along a ventral groove that
travels to the gill cavity for hatching (Martin and Hubbs 1973; Simon 1999),
and Fontenot and Rutherford (1999) noted the apparent release of adhesive
eggs over leaf litter and woody debris.
Reproductive strategy:
According to Poly and Wetzel (2003), A. sayanus is a transbranchioral
spawner – gametes of both sexes are passed directly from the urogenital pore
through the branchial and buccal (oral) cavaties. Species tentatively
classified by Poly and Wetzel (2003) as a nonguarder, brood-hider
[categories in Balon (1981)]. Poly and Wetzel (2003) observed fish in
aquaria and reported two basic behaviors in pre-spawning males: 1) lateral
display with an occasional slow undulation of the body and 2) rapid
trembling of the male’s body with head oriented toward spawning substrate;
further observations showed that both sexes nip and push snouts against the
spawning substrate matrix; the female thrusts her head into the substrate
when prepared to deposit eggs and the male assumes a parallel position
(ventral-lateral); opercula of the female are flared as eggs are extruded
from the urogenital pore, then eggs are directed to the branchial cavity
(likely via two grooves leading there from the urogenital pore); eggs are
passed through the orobranchial cavity during repeated opercular movements,
protruding intermittently from the posterior of the brachial cavity; eggs
are ejected from the orobranchial cavity through the mouth and into the
spawning substrate matrix during the opercular movements; male expels a
large cloud of sperm into the substrate as the eggs are ejected through the
female’s mouth; as with the eggs, the sperm are passed through the
orobranchial cavity of the male. Fletcher et al. (2004) reported that
females thrust heads into sheltered canals of underwater root masses and
release eggs; males congregate at these sites, entering the narrow canals
headfirst to release sperm; under this unique nesting condition, the
forward-shifted urogenital pore may facilitate spawning; no evidence of
extended parental care was found; fish formed their own nesting canals, or
utilized burrows created by aquatic macro-invertebrates and salamanders;
males defended sites by body-plugging sites after spawning.
Fecundity: Females
35-80 mm in length contained 129-160 eggs, ranging from 0.5-0.75 mm in
diameter (McLane 1955). Fertilized eggs are
white, clear, 1 mm in diameter, with single oil droplet <0.4 mm diameter;
incubation period 5-7 days, at 19-20°C (Martin and Hubbs 1973).
Age at maturation: At
age 1 (Mansueti 1963).
Migration: NA
Longevity: 4 years
(Shepherd and Huish 1978); possibly up to 5 years (Hall and Jenkins 1954).
Growth and population
structure: Average length of a population in Oklahoma is 56 mm TL at age
1, 85 mm TL at age 2, 102 mm TL at age 3, and 116 mm TL at age 4 (Hall and
Jenkins 1954). In a coastal plain stream of North Carolina, females were
more numerous and grew faster in their 2nd and 3rd
years than did males (Shepherd and Huish 1978).
Food habits:
Invertivore/carnivore; feeding on small aquatic insects and small fish
(Goldstein and Simon 1999). In Pine Hill Swamp, Illinois, major food items
were chironomids, amphipods, and various aquatic insects (Gunning and Lewis
1955). In North Carolina, frequently
consumed food items included Cladoceran (fish 10-29 mm TL fed heavily on
this item), aquatic Diptera larvae, Isopoda, and Amphipoda (Shepherd and
Huish 1978). In Tuckahoe Creek (James River), Virginia, insects composed
80% of food (dipteran larvae dominating diet; Flemer and Woolcott 1966).
In the St. Johns River system, Florida, principal diet consisted of
aquatic insect larvae, nymphs, and small crustaceans; data strongly
indicated nocturnal feeding (McLane 1955). Parker and Simco (1975) also
reported nocturnal feeding.
Phylogeny and morphologically similar fishes
Only living member of family.
Small individuals often confused with juvenile sunfishes; however, juvenile
sunfish have greater number of dorsal spines (>5) and lack the serrated
preopercle. Aphredoderus sayanus differs from Elassoma zonatum
(banded pygmy sunfish) in having ctenoid scales as opposed to cycloid scales
(Ross 2001).
Host Records
Gyrodactylus aphredoderi
(Trematoda: Monogenea), reported from Alabama (Rogers and Wellborn 1965).
Clinostomum marginatum (Trematoda), reported from Illinois (Hopkins
1933).
Commercial or Environmental Importance
Although this species may be
caught on hook and line and exists successfully in captivity, it is not
valued as either a sport fish or an aquarium fish (Poly 2004).
[Additional literature
noting collection of this species from Texas locations includes, but is not
limited to the following: Baughman (1946); Champ et al. (1973); Evans
and Noble (1979); Kleinsasser and Linam (1987); Linam and Kleinsasser
(1987); Linam et al. 1994); Gelwick and Li (2002); Morgan (2002); Winemiller
et al. (2004).]
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