Macrhybopsis storeriana
silver chub
Type Locality
Lake Erie (Kirtland 1844:71).
Etymology/Derivation of Scientific Name
Macrhybopsis, Greek,
“long rounded face;” storeriana, named for D. H. Storer, an early
student of North American fishes (Pflieger 1997).
Synonymy
Rutilus storerianus
Kirtland 1844:7.
Hybopsis storerianus
Cook 1959:131; Hubbard 1987:23; Mettee et al. 1987:87,1989:45; Nailon and
Pennington 1897:86.
Macrhybopsis storeriana
Boschung 1989:54
Characters
Maximum
size: 231 mm (9.09 in) TL (Gilbert 1980).
Coloration: Pale
grey-green dorsally, becoming silvery on sides and silvery white on belly.
Iris of eye white-yellow. Faint dusky lateral stripe usually present. Caudal
fin lightly pigmented, except the lower 3-4 rays, which are completely unpigmented. Peritonium silvery (Becker 1983).
Counts:
Pharyngeal
teeth 1, 4-4, 1; fewer than10 dorsal
fin soft rays (Hubbs et al 1991); lateral scales 35-41
(usually 38-39); predorsal
scale rows 14-16; anal fin soft rays 8 (rarely 7); pectoral fin soft rays 17 or 18; pelvic
fin soft
rays 8 (Boschung and Mayden 2004).
Body shape: Slender,
moderately compressed, flattened ventrally (Boschung and Mayden 2004).
Snout short, rounded
(Ross 2001).
Mouth position:
Inferior, horizontal (Ross 2001).
Morphology:
Eye large, contained 4 or less times in head (Bailey 1951). Depth at occiput greater than width; maxillary barbel present; 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. Distance from
origin 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; dorsal and
anal fins without spines (Hubbs et al 1991). Underside between pectoral and
pelvic fins normally scaled. Gular area almost smooth, the sensory papillae
minute (Bailey 1951). Adult males have large, uniserial tubercles on the
dorsal surface of pectoral fin rays 2-10 (Etnier and Starnes 1993); head
bears minute sensory buds, but not breeding tubercles (Cross 1967).
Distribution (Native and Introduced)
U.S. distribution:
Wide spread from southern New York to the Red River drainages (Ross 2001).
Texas distribution:
Species found in the Red River (Warren et al. 2000) and the lower
Brazos River; Brazos River population is apparently disjunct from other
populations of this species, which range through the Mississippi River Basin
to Mobile Bay (Gilbert 1980; Hubbs et al. 1991).
[Additional literature
noting collection of this species from Texas locations includes, but is not
limited to the following: Brazos River (Winemiller et al. 2004); Lake
Texoma (Gido et al. 2002); lower Brazos River (Li and Gelwick 2005); Bonn
and Kemp (1952); Hubbs (1957).]
Abundance/Conservation status (Federal, State, Non-governmantal
organizations)
Populations in southern
drainages are currently stable (Warren et al. 2000).
Habitat
Associations
Macrohabitat: Mainly
restricted to large, often silty rivers, where it may be common (Gilbert
1980; Kinney 1954); sometimes found in near the mouths of small streams (Kinney 1954).
Mesohabitat: Broad
rivers with low gradient which flow through old mature valleys; ranging over
substrata which vary from gravel to silt, but found more commonly over silt or
mud bottom (Kinney 1954); collected in
turbid water with very soft sand/silt substrate (Linam et al. 1994).
Trautman (1981) states that this species, normally inhabiting pools, will
move to riffle areas if siltation is heavy. Further, when large streams were
very turbid or depositing unusually large amounts of silt, M. storeriana
would temporarily migrate into clearer streams of higher gradients; when
waters were very clear individuals moved into deep water.
Biology
Spawning season: Late
spring or early summer, in Iowa (Starrett 1951). June and July, in Wisconsin
(Becker 1983). In western Lake Erie, spawning began the second week of June
in water temperature of 19°C (66° F), reached its peak during the last week of June
and first week of July with water temperature at 23°C (73°F), and was
completed by the middle of August (Kinney 1954). Kinney (1954) concluded
that the species spawns at relatively high temperatures.
Spawning habitat:
Lithopelagophils; rock and gravel spawners with pelagic free embryos. (Simon
1999).
Spawning behavior: No
information at this time.
Fecundity: Number of
eggs = 365 + 746.64 X ovary weight (g); in ovaries of 1-year class fish
there were 10 eggs per centimeter, while those of the older year-classes
were 9 eggs per centimeter; immature eggs light yellow; mature eggs orange
(Kinney 1954).
Age at maturation:
Kinney (1954) found most 1-year fish to be sexually mature.
Migration: In Lake
Erie, there is a large shoreward migration in spring (Kinney 1954).
Growth and Population
Structure: Average approximately 124 mm (4.88 in) SL after first year; 147mm
(5.88 in) SL
after second; 164 mm (6.46 in) SL after third (Kinney 1954).
Longevity: 3 years for
males and 4 years for females (Kinney 1954).
Food habits:
Planktivore/Invertivore (Simon 1999). During first year: small crustaceans
(copepods and cladocerans) and midge larvae and pupae. Adult
fish eat mayfly larvae, small mollusks, and crustaceans (cladocerans and
amphipods). Majority of food items found in adults were mayflies (Kinney 1954). Davis
and Miller (1967) classified this species in the group “mouth tasters,”
characterized by large numbers of internal taste buds and enlarged vagal
lobes.
Phylogeny and morphologically similar fishes
Macrhybopsis storeriana
differs from the speckled chub (M. aestivalis), in lacking black
flecks on the body and in having a higher lateral line scale count (38-40 versus
35-38), and its pharyngeal tooth count (1,4-4,1 versus 0,4-4,0; Ross 2001).
The ghost shiner (Notropis buchanani), mimic shiner (N. volucellus), cypress
minnow (Hybognathus hayi),
and plains minnow (H. nuchalis) are silvery minnows occupying large rivers and could
be confused with M. storeriana; however, all lack a barbel in the
corners of the mouth. M. storeriana differs
from other members of the M. aestivalis complex by, lacking definite spotting, and smaller snout; (Boschung and Mayden 2004).
M. storeriana juveniles are somewhat similar to the often sympatric the
river shiner (N.
blennius), the latter lacking a maxillary barbel (Etnier and Starnes
1993).
Host Records
Trematoda,
Dactylogyrus texomensis (Hoffman 1967). Trematodes (3), cestodes (1),
nematodes (1), and acanthocephalans (1) (Bangham and Hunter 1939).
Commercial or Environmental
Importance
Regarded as excellent forage
and bait fish for largemouth and smallmouth black bass (Jordan and Evermann
1937).
References
Bailey, R.M. 1951. A checklist of the fishes of Iowa, with keys for
identification, pp. 187-283. In: Iowa Fish and Fishing. J.R. Harlan
and E.B. Speaker (eds.). State. Conserv. Comm. of Iowa, Des Moines.
Bailey, C.R. 1980. Hybopsis storeriana (Kirtland), Silver chub. p.194
in: D.S. Lee, et al. Atlas of North American Freshwater Fishes. N.C.
State Mus. Nat. Hist., Raleigh. 854 pp.
Bangham, R.V., and G.W. Hunter, III. 1939. Studies on fish parasites of Lake
Erie. Distribution studies. Zoologica 24(4); pt.27:385-448.
Becker, G.C. 1983. Fishes of Wisconsin. The University of Wisconsin Press,
Madison. 1052 pp.
Bonn, E.W., and R.J. Kemp. 1952. Additional records of fresh-water fishes
from Texas. Copeia 1952(3):204-205.
Boschung, H.T. 1989. Atlas of fishes of the upper Tombigbee River Drainage,
Alabama-Mississippi . Proc. S.E. Fishes council 19:1-104.
Boschung, H.T., Jr., and R.L. Mayden. 2004. Fishes of Alabama. Smithsonian
Books, Washington. 736 pp.
Cook, F.A. 1959. Freshwater fishes in Mississippi. Mississippi Game and Fish
Commision, Jackson.
Cross, F.B. 1967. Handbook of Fishes of Kansas. Univ. Kans. Mus. Nat. Hist.
Misc. Publ. 45. 357 pp.
Davis, B.J., and R.J. Miller. 1967. Brain patterns in minnows of the genus
Hybopsis in relation to feeding habits and habitat. Coeia
1967(1):1-39.
Etnier, D.A., and W.C. Starnes. 1993. The Fishes of Tennessee. The
University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville. 681 pp.
Gido, K.B., C.W. Hargrave, W.J. Matthews, G.D. Schnell, D.W. Pogue, and G.W.
Sewell. 2002. Structure of littoral-zone fish communities in relation to
habitat, physical, and chemical gradients in a southern reservoir.
Environmental Biology of Fishes 63:253-263.
Hoffman, G.L. 1967. Parasites of North American Freshwater Fishes.
University of California Press, Berkeley. 486 pp.
Hubbard, W.D. 1987. Distribution and diversity of fishes in the Noxubee
River Drainage, Mississippi. J. Miss. Acad. Sci. 32:19-30.
Hubbs, C. 1957. Distributional patterns of Texas fresh-water fishes. The
Southwestern Naturalist 2(2-3):89-104.
Hubbs, C., R. J. Edwards, G. P. Garrett. 1991. An annotated checklist to the
freshwater fishes of Texas, with keys to the identification of species. The
Texas Journal of Science, Supplement, 43(4):1-56.
Jordan, D.S. And B.W. Evermann. 1896-1900. The fishes of North and Middle
America. Bull. U.S. Nat. Museum 47(1-4):1-3313.
Jordan, D.S. and S.E. Meek. 1885. List of fishes collected in Iowa and
Missouri in August, 1884, with descriptions of three new species. Proc. U.S.
Nat. Mus. 8(1):1-17.
Kinney, E. C. 1954. A life history of the silver chub, Hybopsis
storeriana (Kirtland), in western Lake Erie with notes on associated
species. Diss. Abstr. 20(6): 19878-1980. vol 35. Part II. 30759.
Kirtland, J.P. 1844. Descriptions of Acipenser rubicundus, A.
platyrhyncus, and Rutilus storerianus. Proc. Boston Soc. Nat.
Hist. 1:71.
Li, R.Y., and F.P. Gelwick. 2005. The relationship of environmental factors
to spatial and temporal variation of fish assemblages in a floodplain river
in Texas, USA. Ecology of Freshwater Fish 2005(14):319-330.
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assessment of Allens Creek and the Brazos River, Austin County, Texas.
Report to the Texas Water Development Board. Texas Parks and Wildlife,
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emphasis on the genus Cyprinella (Teleostei: Cypriniformes). University of
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the lower Tombigbee River system in Alabama and Mississippi. Geol. Surv.
Ala. Bull. 107:1-186.
Nailon, R.W. and C.H. Pennington. 1987. Fishes of two dike pools during
summer low flow. J. Miss. Acad. Sci. 32:79-90.
Pflieger, W. L. 1997. The Fishes of Missouri. Missouri Department of
Conservation, Jefferson City. 372 pp.
Ross, S.T. 2001. Inland fishes of Mississippi. University Press of
Mississippi, Jackson. 1-624 pp.
Simon, T. P. 1999. Assessing the sustainability and biological integrity of
water resources using fish communities. CRC Press. Boca Raton; London; New
York; Washington. 671 pp.
Starrett, W. C. 1951. Some factors affecting the abundance of minnows in the
Des Moines River, Iowa. Ecology 32(1):13-27.
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
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25(10):7-29.
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channel. Report to the Texas Water Development Board. Texas Agriculture
Experiment Station and Texas State University, 59 pp.
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