Notropis atherinoides
emerald shiner
Type Locality
Lake Erie (Rafinesque 1818).
Etymology/Derivation of Scientific Name
Notropis, Greek,
meaning “back keel;” atherinoides Greek, meaning “silverside-like,”
in reference to resemblance to a member of the silverside family (Pflieger
1997).
Synonymy
Based on his own work and the
work of Coburn (1982), Mayden (1989) listed N. atherinoides in the
subgenus Notropis.
Notropis atherinoides
Rafinesque 1818:204; Hildebrand and Towers 1928:117; Cook 1959:118.
Minnilus dilectus Hay
1881:508, 1883:71
Characters
Maximum size: 127mm
(5.00 in) TL
(Flittner 1964).
Coloration: Live fish
are a bright, iridescent silvery green with a silver mid-lateral band. The
back and upper sides are greenish to straw colored, and the venter is
silvery white. The dorsal scales with melanophores and have
pigmented margins and clear centers. There is a variable mid-dorsal stripe
extending from the back of the head to the caudal base, and the head is
diffusely pigmented with melanophores from the occiput anteriorly to the
snout. The area between the nostril and eye lacks melanophores and only a
few melanophores surround orbit. The lips are pigmented medially and the
pigment continues about half way down the midline of the lower jaw. The
cheek, suborbital, and opercle are silvery. A mid-lateral band about 1.5 scales
wide extends from the opercle to the caudal base, and is diffusely stippled
anteriorly, becoming more prominent on the caudal penduncle. Scales along
the side are bright and silvery. The dorsal, caudal, and leading rays of the
pectoral fins are lined with melanophores, but the remaining rays and
membranes are clear. No nuptial colors are exhibited by either sex (Ross
2001).
Counts: Pharyngeal
teeth 2, 4-4, 2 or 1,4-4,1; usually
9-12 anal fin soft rays (Hubbs et al. 1991); lateral line scales 35-43, predorsal
scale rows 19-20 (18-21); pectoral fin soft rays 14-16; pelvic fin soft rays 8 (8-9);
gill rakers 10-12 (Etnier and Starnes 1993).
Body shape: Body
slender and compressed, its depth contained 1.9 to 2.5 times in distance from
dorsal origin to occiput.
Mouth position: Terminal and oblique (Hubbs et al. 1991).
Morphology:
Snout blunt and short (Bailey and Allum1962). Eye longer than snout
contained about 3 times in body depth, measured over curve (Bailey 1951); underside of opercle gray; a few chromatophores on
lateral line scales other than those on lateral stripe; middorsal stripe
behind dorsal fin usually three to five chromatophores wide (Hubbs et al.
1991); origin of dorsal fin behind insertion of pelvic fin; dorsal origin
nearer base of caudal fin than tip of snout (Bailey 1962; Hubbs et al.
1991); dorsal fin more triangular, last fin ray less then one half length of
the longest; interradial membranes of dorsal fin without melanophores
(except along rays). 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 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. 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 (Hubbs et al. 1991). Length of
longest gill rakers 2-2.5 times their basal width (Etnier and Starnes 1993).
Intestine short, forming a simple S-shaped loop (Hubbs et
al. 1991).
Distribution (Native and Introduced)
U.S. distribution:
Widely distributed across United States especially in the Mississippi Basin
it is at the edge of its range in Texas (Hubbs et at., 1991).
Texas distribution:
Occurs in Red, Sabine, Neches, and lower Trinity Drainages (Hubbs et at.,
1991). Sabine Lake unit (including minor coastal drainages west to Galveston
Bay; Warren et al. 2000).
Abundance/Conservation status (Federal, State, Non-governmental
organizations):
Not listed as threatened or
endangered by Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (2006). Populations in the
southern United States considered currently stable (Warren et al. 2000).
Habitat Associations
Macrohabitat:
Restricted to open rivers and lakes of variably turbidity where it swims in
large schools (Gilbert and Burgess 1979).
Mesohabitat: Tolerant
of low oxygen levels (Matthews and Maness 1979) and turbidity (Boschung and
Mayden 2004). Campbell and MacCrimmon (1970) reported the temperature
preference for the emerald shiner as 25°C (77°F).
Biology
Spawning season: In
Iowa, females taken in mid-July had completed spawning; in Illinois, ripe females
taken from mid-May to early June; in Lake Erie, spawning from late June to
late July, or even mid-August (Carlander 1969). In Wisconsin, major spawning
period is in June and July; may occur as early as late May, extending to the
beginning of August (Becker 1983). In Michigan, protracted summer spawning
period. Spawning is temperature dependent, beginning shortly after the 22.2°C
(72.0°F)
threshold temperature is exceeded (Flittner 1964). In southern Canada,
gravid females taken from water temperatures ranging from 20.1-23.2°C
(68.2-73.8°F) (Campbell and MacCrimmon 1970).
Spawning habitat: Near
surface in open water (Carlander 1969; Flittner 1964). Spawning substrate is
normally gravel shoals (Dobie et al. 1956); rounded boulders, course rubble
and sand (Campbell and MacCrimmon 1970), hard sand or mud swept clean
of detritus are also used (Flittner 1964).
Reproductive strategy:
Pelagophils (Simon 1999). Spawning occurs at night, as fish form large
schools in the surface waters over a substratum of clean sand or hard mud.
The shiners first appear about 1 to 2 feet below the surface milling and darting
rapidly and erratically in a circular path. The smaller males appear to
pursue larger females for a few seconds at a time. As these pairs swim about
in a 10 to 20 foot circle, the male overtakes the females and presses
closely on either the right or the left side in what appears to be an
interlocking of pectoral fins. The pair gyrates briefly, and then
slows down as female arches her side upward stops for an instant, rolling
over further, eggs are released and fertilized at the instant
of rolling (Flittner 1964).
Fecundity: In the
Wisconsin River, in late June, an age-I female 69 mm (2.72 in) TL, with ripe ovaries
constituting 33% of total weight, contained approximately 2,990 mature
yellow eggs 0.9 mm (0.03 in) diameter. Immature white eggs also present (approx.
one-fourth the number of mature eggs). A female (estimated to be an age-II
specimen) 75 mm (2.95 in) TL, collected mid-July from the Wisconsin River, held
approximately 2,040 mature eggs averaging 0.8 mm diameter (Becker 1983). In
Lake Simcoe, Canada, the number of eggs in pre-spawning mature females
varied from 868 in an age-I specimen, 69 mm (2.72 in) TL, weighing 2.5 g to 8,733 eggs
in an age-III specimen, 98mm (3.86 in) TL and 8.9 g; egg of ripe females ranged from
0.21-0.67 mm (0.008-0.026 in) diameter; number of eggs increased with total length, weight
and gonadal weight (Campbell and MacCrimmon 1970). The fertilized
nonadhesive eggs sink to the bottom where they hatch in 24-32 hours (Becker
1983).
Age at maturation:
Spawning fish were primarily in age classes 2-3. Males are mature at 55-60 mm
(2.17-2.36 in) TL, and females at 65mm (2.56 in) TL (Flittner 1964; Fuchs 1967; Campbell and
MacCrimmon 1970).
Migration: Schooling
species, staying offshore during summer months, usually near the surface;
moving inshore in autumn and aggregating at times off docks, piers, and
river mouths in great numbers; these large schools in inshore waters usually
composed of young-of-the-year; as season advances, move into deeper water
for overwintering; in early spring, moving into surface waters at night and
descending to deeper waters during the day (Scott and Crossman 1973;
Campbell and MacCrimmon 1970).
Growth and population
structure: During their first year fish reach 63-78mm (2.48-3.07
in) TL. Ages 2-3 are 88-98mm (2.48-3.86 in) TL and 98-110mm (3.86-4.33
in) TL; (Flittner 1964; Fuchs 1967; J.S.Campbell
and MacCrimmon 1970). Maximum growth rates occur at 24-29°C (75.2-84.2°F) and growth
markedly declines below 15°C (59°F) (McCormick and Kleiner 1976).
Longevity: Females
live longer than males. May live up to three to five years; all older fish
were females. (Flittner 1964; Fuchs 1967; Campbell and MacCrimmon 1970).
Food habits:
Planktivore; size selective picker; move with planktonic food source up at
dusk, back down at dawn (Simon 1999). Adults may remain planktivorous and
seem to prefer cladocerans. Insects make up a much smaller component of
overall diet. Most insects consumed were adult rather then larval stages.
Algae and plant materials may also be eaten especially during spring
(Flittner 1964; Fuchs 1967; Campbell and MacCrimmon 1970; Hartman et
al.1992).
Phylogeny and morphologically similar fishes:
Notropis atherinoides
is similar to the Rio Grande shiner (N. jemezanus) as well as the sharpnose
shiner
(N.
oxyrhynchus). N. jemezanus differs from
N. atherinoides in that it has a larger, less slanted mouth extending
under eye; smaller eye; deeper snout; lacks black lips (may be dusky), black
around anal fin base and along underside of caudle peduncle. N.
oxyrhynchus differs from N. atherinoides in that it has a sharply
pointed snout, and the upper jaw is level with upper edge of eye (Page and
Burr 1991). The posterior position of the dorsal fin (posterior to pelvic
fin base) renders the N. atherinoides
similar to species of the genus
Lythrurus. Lythrurus species can be distinguished by the presence
of numerous crowded predorsal scales (usually greater than 22 predorsal
rows; Ross 2001). Mayhew (1983) reported hybridization of N. atherinoides
and mimc shiners (Notropis volucellus) in the Monongahela River, western
Pennsylvania.
Host Records:
Gyrodactylus parvicirrus (Harris et al. 2004); Trematoda:
Neodactylogyrus archis, Posthodiplostomum minimum; Cestoda:
Proteocephalus ambloplitis, P. pinguis, exper. (Hoffman 1967).
Commercial or Environmental Importance
Important as forage fish in
many parts of its range (Boschung and Mayden 2004; Scott and Crossman 1973).
Their glistening sides, unique form, and graceful movements make the emerald
shiner an excellent aquarium fish. Hardiness in cold weather makes it a
favorite bait for winter fishing; especially good bait for bass, perch, and
walleye (Becker 1983).
References
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identification, pp. 187-283. In: Iowa Fish and Fishing. J.R. Harlan
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