Dionda nigrotaeniata
Guadalupe roundnose minnow
Type Locality
Upper waters of Wallace
Creek, on of heads of the Medina River, San Saba County, Texas (Cope 1880
in:
Eschmeyer 2008).
Etymology/Derivation of Scientific Name
Dionda – from the
Greek Dione, the mother of Venus (Edwards 1999); nigro –
black; taeniata – striped (Scharpf 2005).
Synonymy
Hybognathus nigrotaeniatus
Cope 1880:37.
Dionda episcopa Wayne
1979; Wayne and Whiteside 1985; Hubbs et al. 1991:18.
Dionda nigrotaeniata
Gilbert 1998:120; Warren et al. 2000; Nelson et al. 2004:70, 197-198;
Scharpf 2005:16; Schonhuth et al. 2008.
Recognized as valid but
unnamed species by Mayden et al. (1992); previously synonymized with
Dionda episcopa. Gilbert (1998) determined that nigrotaeniata was
an available name for this species.
Characters
Maximum size: 90 mm
(3.54 in) TL
(Wayne 1979).
Coloration: Dorsal
region dusky (Cope 1880). Black band through eye to snout; black rounded
caudal spot (Cope 1880; Hubbs and Brown 1956; Hubbs et al. 1991).
Individuals from the Guadalupe River Basin were described as follows:
breeding males observed to have a bright yellow-orange color; however some
larger males collected during the non-spawning season were yellow in color;
mature females during the spawning season had a slight yellow color but not
as bright as the males (Wayne 1979; Wayne and Whiteside 1985).
Counts: Pharyngeal
teeth 0,4-4,0 (Hubbs et al. 1991). Counts for specimens examined from
Fessenden Spring, Comal River, and the San Marcos River (Guadalupe River
Basin) ranged from: 37-38 (34-40) lateral line scales; 8 (7-9) dorsal fin
soft rays; 8 (7-9) anal fin soft rays (Wayne 1979).
Mouth position:
Subterminal
Body shape: Terete. Dorsal
origin-pelvic: above or posterior (Schonhuth et al. 2008). Caudal peduncle
depth wide; long postorbital; eye as long as snout; distance from end of
anal fin to end of caudal peduncle contained two and one-half or fewer times
in distance from tip of snout to origin of anal fin (described as Dionda
episcopa; Hubbs et al. 1991).
Morphology:
Breeding males with distinct tubercles present on the head, during the
spawning season, and also reported that tubercles were present during other
times of the year, but they were not so well developed; two larger females
were observed to have a few small tubercles on the head (Wayne 1979; Wayne
and Whiteside 1985). First obvious dorsal fin ray a thin splint, closely
attached to the following well developed but unbranched ray, especially at
tip; lower lip thin without a fleshy lobe; lateral line usually not decurved,
either straight or with a broad arch; premaxillaries protractile; upper lip
separated from skin of snout by a deep groove continuous across the midline;
cartilaginous ridge of lower jaw hardly evident and not separated by a
definite groove from the lower lip (described as Dionda episcopa;
Hubbs et al. 1991). Intestine long, more than twice the length of the body (Hubbs et al.
1991).
Distribution (Native and Introduced)
U.S. distribution:
Found only in Texas.
Texas distribution:
Endemic to the spring-influenced headwaters of the Colorado and Guadalupe
river basins (Edwards et al. 2004). Warren et al. (2000), Scharpf (2005),
and Schonhuth et al. (2008) listed the following drainage units for
distribution of D. nigrotaeniata in the state: Colorado River,
San Antonio Bay (including minor coastal drainages west of mouth of Colorado
River to mouth of Nueces River).
[Additional literature
noting collection of this species from Texas locations includes, but is not
limited to the following: Hubbs and Brown (1956); Hubbs (1957).]
Abundance/Conservation status (Federal, State, NGO)
Currently secure (Warren et
al. 2000; Scharpf 2005); common and abundant in good environments (Edwards
et al. 2004).
Habitat Associations
Macrohabitat:
Primarily restricted to clear spring-fed waters that have slight temperature
variations (Brown 1953; Hubbs et al. 1953; Jurgens 1951; Kuehne 1955;
Tilton 1961; Wayne 1979).
Mesohabitat: No
information at this time.
Biology
Spawning season:
November - March in central Texas (Tilton 1961). A study at Fessenden Spring
(Guadalupe River Basin), Texas, indicated some spawning from January –
August with spawning peaks occurring in April and May and in July and August
(Wayne 1979; Wayne and Whiteside 1985).
Spawning habitat: No
information at this time.
Spawning Behavior:
No information at this time.
Fecundity: Based on
50 females containing mature ova collected from Fessenden Spring (Guadalupe
River Basin), Texas, fecundity ranged from 2 – 540 with a mean of 164 ova
(Wayne 1979; Wayne and Whiteside 1985). In the Comal River, fecundity based
on 21 females containing mature ova ranged from 8-584 with a mean with a
mean of 195; and in the San Marcos River, fecundity ranged from 238-620 with
a mean of 352 based on 5 females containing mature ova
(Wayne 1979).
Age/sixe at maturation:
Females ≥ 30 mm (1.18 in) SL contained mature ova (Wayne 1979).
Migration: No
information at this time.
Growth and Population
structure: 80 males and 98 females were collected from Fessenden Spring
(Guadalupe River Basin), Texas, with a 0.82:1.00 female to male ratio (Wayne
and Whiteside 1985).
Longevity: No
information at this time.
Food habits:
Vegetation main component of diet (Wayne 1979); schools of D. episcopa
observed at Fessenden Spring (Guadalupe River Basin), Texas, observed
apparently feeding on green
filamentous algae (Wayne 1979).
Phylogeny and morphologically similar fishes
Dionda nigrotaeniata
is apparently an ecological equivalent to the roundnose minnow (D.
episcopa; found in the Pecos River), and the two species may be
closely related (Edwards et al. 2004). Distribution of the following similar
species differs from that of D. nigrotaeniata, in Texas: the Devils
River minnow (D. diaboli) is found in the Devils River, San Felipe
Creek, and Sycamore Creek in Val Verde County, and Pinto Creek in Kinney
County; the manantial roundnose minnow (D. argentosa) is found in the
Devils River, San Felipe and Sycamore creeks in Val Verde County; and the
Nueces roundnose minnow (D. serena) is found in the Nueces River
system.
Host Records
Trematoda:
Plagioporus sinitsini, Posthodiplostomum minimum (Klaus
1991; Mathis 1993; Mayberry et al. 2000). The sporozoan Myxobolus sp.
and the parasitic copepod Lernaea sp. were external parasites found
on fish taken from Fessenden Spring (Guadalupe River Basin), Texas (Wayne
1979).
Commercial or Environmental Importance
No information at this time.
References
Brown, W.H.
1953. Introduced fish species of the Guadalupe River Basin. Texas Journal of
Science 5:245-251.
Cope, E.D. 1880. On the zoological position of Texas. Bull. U.S. Natl. Mus.
17, 1-51.
Edwards, R.J. 1999. Ecological profiles for selected stream-dwelling Texas
freshwater fishes II. Report to the Texas Water Development Board. 69 pp.
Edwards,
R.J., G.P. Garrett, and N.L. Allan. 2004. Aquifer-dependent fishes of the
Edwards Plateau region. Chapter 13, pp. 253-268 in: Mace, R.E., E.S.
Angle, and W.F. Mullican, III (eds.). Aquifers of the Edwards Plateau. Texas
Water Development Board. 360 pp.
Eschmeyer,
W. N. Catalog of Fishes electronic version (23 April 2008): http://www.calacademy.org/research/ichthyology/catalog/fishcatsearch.html
Gilbert,
C.R. 1998. Type catalogue of recent and fossil North American freshwater
fishes: families Cyprinidae, Catostomidae, Ictaluridae, Centrarchidae and
Ellasomatidae. Florida Museum of Natural History, Special Publication 1,
University of Florida, Gainesville.
Hubbs, C.
1957. Distributional patterns of Texas fresh-water fishes. The Southwestern
Naturalist 2(2/3):89-104.
Hubbs, C.,
and W.H. Brown. 1956. Dionda diaboli (Cyprinidae), a new minnow from
Texas. Southwestern Naturalist 1:69-77.
Hubbs, C.,
R.A. Kuehne, and J.C. Ball. 1953. The fishes of the upper Guadalupe River,
Texas. Texas J. Sci. 5:216-244.
Jurgens, K.C.
1951. The distribution and ecology of the fishes of the San Marcos River.
M.A. Thesis, University of Texas, Austin.
Klaus, B.
1991. A survey of the endoparasitic helminthes of Dionda episcopa,
the roundnose minnow, and Astyanax mexicanus, the Mexican tetra, from
the San Marcos and Comal Rivers, Texas. M.A. Thesis, Southwest Texas State
University, San Marcos.
Kuehne, R.A.
1955. Stream surveys of the Guadalupe and San Antonio Rivers. Texas Game and
Fish Com., IF Report Ser. 1:1-56.
Mathis, S.D.
1993. A morphometric study of Plagioporus sinitsini Mueller (Digenea:
Opecoelidae) from the gallbladder of three Cyprinid hosts from the Blanco,
San Marcos, and Comal Rivers in central Texas. Master of Science Thesis,
Southwest Texas State University, San Marcos. 44 pp.
Mayberry, L.F., A.G. Canaris, J.R. Bristol, and Scott L. Gardner. 2000.
Bibliography of parasites and vertebrate host in Arizona, New Mexico and
Texas (1893-1984). University of Nebraska Harold W. Manter Laboratory of
Parasitology Web Server, published on the World-Wide-Web, 100 pp.
Mayden, R.L., Matson, R.H., Hillis, D.M., 1992. Speciation in the North
American Genus Dionda (Teleostei: Cypriniformes). In: Mayden, R.L. (Ed.),
Systematics, Historical Ecology and North American Freshwater Fishes.
Standford University Press, California, pp. 710–746.
Nelson, J.S., E.J. Crossman, H. Espinoza-Perez, L.T. Findley, C.R. Gilbert,
R.N. Lea, and J.D. Williams. 2004. Common and Scientific Names of Fishes
from the United States, Canada, and Mexico. American Fisheries Society,
Special Publication 29, Bethesda, Maryland.
Scharpf, C.
2005. Annotated checklist of North American freshwater fishes including
subspecies and undescribed forms, Part 1: Petromyzontidae through Cyprinidae.
American Currents, Special Publication 31(4):1-44.
Schonhuth,
S., I. Doadrio, O. Dominguez-Donminguez, D.M. Hillis, and R.L. Mayden. 2008.
Molecular evolution of southern North American cyprinidae (Actinopterygii),
with the description of the new genus Tampichthys from central Mexico.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 47(2008):729-756.
Tilton, J.E. 1961. Ichthyological survey of the Colorado River of Texas.
M.A. Thesis, University of Texas, Austin.
Warren, M.L.,
Jr., B.M. Burr, S.J. Walsh, H.L. Bart, Jr., R.C. Cashner, D.A. Etnier, B.J.
Freeman, B.R. Kuhajda, R.L. Mayden, H.W. Robison, S.T. Ross, and W.C.
Starnes. 2000. Diversity, Distribution, and Conservation status of the
native freshwater fishes of the southern United States. Fisheries,
Conservation. 25(10):7-29.
Wayne, L.M.
1979. Ecology of the roundnose minnow, Dionda episcopa (Osteichthyes:
Cyprinidae) from three central Texas springs. M.S. Thesis, Southwest Texas
State University, San Marcos. 50 pp.
Wayne, L.M.,
and B.G. Whiteside. 1985. Reproduction data on Dionda episcopa from
Fessenden Spring, Texas. Texas Journal of Science 37(4):321-328.
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