Pylodictis olivaris
flathead catfish
Type Locality
Ohio River (Rafinesque 1818).
Etymology/Derivation of Scientific Name
Pylodictis, Greek,
meaning “mud fish;” olivaris, Latin, meaning “olive-colored” (Pflieger
1997).
Synonymy
Pilodictus olivaris
Hay 1881:514.
Leptops olivaris Hay
1883:74; Evermann 1899:306; Hildebrand and Towers 1928:121.
Pylodictus olivaris
Cook 1959:140.
Characters
Maximum size: 1410 mm
TL (Carlander 1969).
Life colors: Back and
sides gray to brown with dark brown-black mottling that may extend ventrally
onto belly. Undersides of head and body white to yellow. Nasal and maxillary
barbells dark; chin barbells white to yellow. In large fish, chin barbels
may be slightly dusky, never black. Adipose fin dusky or mottled, frequently
having a light margin in small fish. Pelvic, pectoral, and dorsal fins
densely covered with melanophores in the basal half to three-quarters of the
fins, the remaining marginal areas unpigmented. Anal fin dusky, frequently
having a black marginal band. Caudal fin dusky. Immature fish have a
light-colored patch on the tip of the upper lobe of the tail, which seems to
disappear when fish mature (Ross 2001).
Counts: 8-10 gill
rakers; 6-7 dorsal rays; 16-17 (14-17) anal rays; 8-11 pectoral rays; 9
pelvic rays (Ross 2001).
Body shape: Slender,
elongated; becoming moderately robust as adults (Ross 2001). Head depressed
(Hubbs et al. 1991).
Mouth position:
Terminal (Goldstein and Simon 1999). Lower jaw projects forward beyond the
upper jaw (Ross 2001).
External morphology:
Adipose fin free at tip, not joined to caudal fin (Hubbs et al 1991). Anal
fin base quite short, length goes into SL 5.3-6.3 times. Small eyes (Ross
2001). Males have prominent posteriorly directed genital papilla with a
small rounded urogenital opening at tip. Females have a recessed genital
papilla with a larger urogenital opening that appears as a long slit.
Urogenital opening of adult female becomes inflamed in late spring and
summer (period of greatest spawning activity; Johnson 1950; Turner and
Summerfelt 1971). Genital papilla of immature females invaginated and hardly
discernable (Turner and Summerfelt 1971).
Internal morphology:
Premaxillary band of teeth on upper jaw with a lateral backward extension on
each side (Hubbs et al. 1991). Ratio of digestive tract (DT) to total length
(TL): DT 1.0 TL (Goldstein and Simon 1999).
Distribution (Native and Introduced)
U.S. distribution:
Ranges throughout the Mississippi, Ohio, and Missouri basins southward along
the Gulf drainages to Mexico (Hubbs et al. 1991).
Texas distribution:
Species occurs statewide (Hubbs et al. 1991). Warren et al. (2000) list the
following drainage units for distribution of Pylodictis olivaris 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, San Antonio Bay (including
minor coastal drainages west of mouth of Colorado River to mouth of Nueces
River), Nueces River.
Abundance/Conservation status (Federal, State, NGO)
Southern drainage populations
are currently stable (Warren et al. 2000).
Habitat Associations
Macrohabitat:
Characteristic of deep holes of medium and large-sized rivers (Glodek 1980).
Large streams (Minkley and Deacon 1959).
Mesohabitat: Deep,
quiet pools of main rivers, being found in tributary streams only in deep
pools adjacent to the main stream (Cowley and Sublette
1987).Young-of-the-year live in rubble bottomed riffles until between 2 and
4 inches in length. At that size fish become more evenly distributed in the
stream; some remain in riffles, but more move into pools, deeper riffles,
and into almost all other habitats. This random distribution seems the rule
in fish ranging from 4 to 12 inches in length. Individuals measuring 12 to
16 inches in length were associated with cover at intermediate depths in the
stream, while larger individuals, more then 16 inches in length, almost
invariably near more massive logs and drift usually in or near deep holes in
the stream bed (Minkley and Deacon 1959).
Biology
Spawning season: In
Texas, late June and July (Hubbs et al. 1953; Munger and Deacon 1959).
Spawning location:
Nests constructed under logs or other concealing cover (Breder and Rosen
1966).
Spawning Behavior:
Guarders; nest spawners; spleophils – hole nesters (Simon 1999). Nests
constructed by both male and female. After chasing female from the nest,
male remains to guard nest and care for eggs and young (Breder and Rosen
1966). Henderson (1965) reported that males in Texas hatchery pens behaved
viciously while guarding eggs; male would “tear the female to pieces” when
she attempted to enter the spawning jar which contained eggs; a number of
females that had spawned were killed by the male, in spite of efforts to
remove the female from the area as soon as possible.
Fecundity: Eggs are
gelatinous, adhesive (Breder and Rosen
1966). In small hatchery-reared brood fish, spawns numbered from 3,000-5,000
eggs (Henderson 1965). In Kansas, Minckley and Deacon (1959) reported that
females of 305-610 mm TL can produce from 6,900-11,300 eggs, averaging
2.8-3.2 mm diameter. Depending on size of females ranging from 1.05-11.66
kg, in an Oklahoma reservoir, 4,076 – 58,792 eggs were laid; ripe eggs
averaged 3.7 mm diameter (Turner and Summerfelt 1971). Snow (1959) reported
egg mass weighing slightly less than 1,089 g (2.4 lb) which contained about
15,000 eggs. Giudice (1965) reported
hatching of eggs in 6-7 days at 23.9-27.8 degrees C; Snow (1959) reported
hatching in 9 days at 24-25.9 degrees C, fry averaging 11 mm long.
Age/Size at maturation:
In Texas reservoirs, individuals become sexually mature between ages 2 and 5
at a total length between 290 and 635mm (Munger et al. 1994).
Minckley and Deacon (1959)
reported mature males at 3-4 years, and females at 4-5 years. Carlander
(1969) reported males usually maturing at 3-5 years old, after exceeding 38
cm TL, while females mature at 4-6 years old, and in excess of 46 cm TL.
Migration: Sedentary
(Funk 1957; Robinson 1977; Dames et al., 1989; Jackson 1999), with 1-3 'home
sites' they return to after nighttime movements (Vokoun and Rabeni 2005).
Growth and Population
Structure: Ross (2001) summarized large amount of age and growth data,
noting that rates vary considerably among areas, and seem to be higher if
individuals make early transition to a fish diet. In general, fish reach
51-353 mm TL at the end of one year, and 168-484 mm, 238-649 mm, 374-758 mm,
497-843 mm, 581-951 mm, 795-1054 mm, 824-1099 mm, and 1100 mm TL at ages
2-14 respectively.
Longevity: Lifespan
can exceed 19 years (Carlander 1969).
Food habits: First and
second level trophic classifications are invertivore/carnivore, and benthic
and drift/whole body, respectively; feeding behavior: passive predator. Main
food items of juveniles are microcrustaceans and insect larvae; main food
items of adults are crayfishes, clams, and particularly fishes including
Carpiodes carpio, Notropis buchanani, N. lutrensis, N.
stramineus, Semotilus atromaculatus, Ictalurus punctatus,
Noturus nocturnus, Pylodictis olivaris, Lepomis megalotis,
Percina phoxocephala, and Aplodinotus grunniens (Minckley and
Deacon; Goldstein and Simon 1999; Jackson 1999). Primarily nocturnal feeders
(a time when prey are more vulnerable to visual deception; Moyle 1976) that
forage in a wide variety of habitats (Etnier and Starnes 1993), including
area shallow enough to expose dorsal fin (Trautman 1957); most feed by
lunging and seizing prey after lying motionless (Minkley and Deacom 1959).
Trautman (1957) reported having seen large individuals lying motionless on
the bottom with an open mouth; personal communications from local Ohio
fisherman conveyed reports of cover-seeking prey swimming into the open
mouths of fishes; further, large numbers of hiding species such as rock bass
(Ambloplites rupestris), spotted blackbass (Micropterus puntulatus),
and small catfishes (Ictaluridae) have been found in stomachs of large
flatheads, lending credence to these statements.
Phylogeny and morphologically similar fishes
Monotypic genus (Glodek 1980)
Pylodictis apparently unchanged since mid-Miocene, forming the sister
taxon to the blind, subterranean genus Satan; Pylodictus and
Satan are sister group to a clade containing Noturus (Lundberg 1992;
Ross 2001). Unlikely to be confused with other catfishes, as it differs from
the channel (Ictalurus punctatus) and blue (Ictalurus furcatus)
catfishes in having a rounded caudal fin (versus a forked), and from the
bullheads (Ameiurus) in having a greatly flattened head, posterior
extensions of the premaxillary tooth patch, and a projecting lower jaw (Ross
2001). Etnier and Starnes (1993) noted juveniles might be mistaken for one
of the madtom species (Noturus); however the free posterior end of
adipose fin of Pylodictis is apparent even in small sizes.
Pylodictis olivaris reported to hybridize with the channel catfish (Ictalurus
punctatus; Trautman 1957).
Host Records
In Kansas populations, the
cestode, Marsipometra, was commonly found in the duodenum and
nematodes occurred occasionally in the hindgut (Minkley and Deacon 1959).
Becker (1983) noted that Pylodictis olivaris is host to the glochidia
of a number of freshwater mussels, including Amblema plicata,
Megalonaias gigantean, Quadrula nodulata, Q. pustulosa,
Q. quadrina, and Elliptio dilatata.
Commercial or Environmental Importance
Rapid dispersal and
population growth rates of introduced flathead catfish, along with their
obligate carnivorous food habits, have caused concern among ichthyologists
and management agencies (Brown et al. 2005). United States Fish and Wildlife
Service had placed the flathead catfish as its highest priority among
invasive animal species in the southeastern United States (Memorandum dated
3 November 1999; Brown et al. 2005). Species can attain sizes greater then
1000 mm TL, and weigh more than 50 kg, and is regarded by many anglers to be
a big game fish (Carroll and Hall 1964; Jackson 1999). Overall U.S. angling
record of 44.5 kg (98 lb) was caught in Texas in 1986 (Ross 2001). Henderson
(1965) noted that fingerling mortality was very high in ponds where large
numbers of crayfish were present.
References
Becker, G.C. 1983. Fishes of Wisconsin. University of Wisconsin Press,
Madison. 1052 pp.
Breder, C.M.
Jr., and D.E. Rosen. 1966. Modes of Reproduction in Fishes. T.F.H.
Publications, Jersey City, New Jersey. 941 pp.
Brown, J.J.,
J. Perillo, T.J. Kwak, and R.J. Horwitz. 2005. Implications of Pylodictis
olivaris (flathead catfish) in to the Delaware and Susquehana drainages.
Northeastern Naturalist 12(4):473-484.
Carroll, B.B. and G.E. Hall. 1964. Growth of catfish in Norris Reservoir,
Tennessee. Journal of Tennessee Academy of Science 39:86-91.
Carlander, K.D. 1969. Handbook of Freshwater Fishery Biology. Volume 1. Iowa
State University Press, Ames. 752 pp.
Cook, F.A.
1959. Freshwater fishes in Mississippi. Mississippi Game and Fish Commision,
Jackson. 239 pp.
Dames, H.R., T.G. Coon and J.W. Robinson. 1989. Movements of channel and
flathead catfish between the Missouri River and a tributary, Perche Creek.
Trans. Am. Fish. Soc. 118:670-679.
Etnier, D.A., and W.C. Starnes. 1993. The Fishes of Tennessee. University of
Tennessee Press, Knoxville. 681 pp.
Evermann, BW. 1899. A report on investigations by the U.S. Fish Commission
in Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas in 1897. Rept. U.S. Fish Comm.
24:287-310.
Funk, J.L. 1957. Movement of stream fishes in Missouri. Trans. Am. Fish.
Soc. 85:39-57.
Giudice, J.J. 1965. Investigations on the propagation and survival of
flathead catfish in troughs. Proc. Southeast. Assoc. Game Fish Commnrs.
17:178-180.
Glodek, G.S. 1980. Pylodictis olivaris (Rafinesque) Flathead catfish.
pp. 472 in: D.S. Lee et al. Atlas of North American Freshwater
fishes. N.C. State Mus. Nat. Hist., Raleigh, i-r + 854.
Goldstein, R.M., and T.P. Simon. 1999. Toward a united definition of guild
structure for feeding ecology of North American freshwater fishes. pp.
123-202 in T.P. Simon, editor. Assessing the sustainability and
biological integrity of water resources using fish communities. CRC Press,
Boca Raton, Florida. 671 pp.
Hay, O.P.
1881. On a collection of fishes from eastern Mississippi. Proc. U.S. Nat.
Mus. 3:488-515.
Hay, O.P.
1883. On a collection of fishes from the lower Mississippi Valley. Bull.
U.S. Fish Comm. 2:57-75.
Henderson,
H. 1965. Observation on the propagation of flathead catfish in the San
Marcos State fish hatchery, Texas. Proc. Southeast. Assoc. Game Fish Commnrs.
17:173-177.
Hildebrand,
S.F. and I.L. Towers. 1928. Annotated list of fishes collected in the
vicinity of Greenwood Mississippi, with descriptions of three new species.
Bull. U.S. Bur. Fish. 43(2)105-136.
Hubbs, C., R.A. Kuehne, and J.C. Ball. 1953. The fishes of the upper
Guadalupe River. Texas Journal of Science 5(2):216-244.
Hubbs, C., R.J. Edwards, G.P. Garrett. 1991. An annotated checklist to the
freshwater fishes of Texas, with keys to identification of species. The
Texas Journal of Science, Supplement 43(4):1-56.
Jackson, D.C. 1999. Flathead catfish: Biology, fisheries and management. Pp
23-35, In E.R. Irwin, W. A. Hubert, C. F. Rabeni, H. L. Schramm, Jr,
and T. Coon (eds). Catfish 2000: Proceedings of the International Ictalurid
Symposium. American Fisheries Society Symposium 24, American Fisheries
Society, Bethesda, M.D. 516 pp.
Johnson, M.C. 1950. Some experiments in the propogation of the flathead
catfish (Polydictis olivaris (Raf.) in ponds. M.S. Thesis, Auburn
University, Auburn, Alabama.
Lundberg, J.G. 1992. The phylogeny of ictalurid catfishes: a synthesis of
recent work, pp. 392-420. In: Systematics, historical ecology, and North
American freshwater fishes. R.L. Mayden, ed. Stanford Univ. Press, Stanford,
CA. 969 pp.
Minckley, W.L. and J.E. Deacon. 1959. Biology of the flathead catfish in
Kansas. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 88:344-355.
Moyle, P.B. 1976. Inland Fishes of California. University of California
Press, Berkeley. 405 pp.
Munger, C.R., G.R. Wilde, and B.J. Follis. 1994. Flathead catfish age and
size at maturation in Texas. North American Journal of Fisheries Management
14:403-408.
Pflieger, W.L. 1997. The Fishes of Missouri. Missouri Department of
Conservation, Jefferson City. 372 pp.
Robinson, J.W. 1977. The utilization of dikes by certain fishes in the
Missouri River. Federal Aid Project 2. 199R. Missouri Department of
Conservation, Jefferson City. 14 pp.
Ross, S.T. 2001. The Inland Fishes of Mississippi. University Press of
Mississippi, Jackson. 624 pp.
Simon, T.P. 1999. Assessment of Balon’s reproductive guilds with application
to Midwestern North American Freshwater Fishes, pp. 97-121. In:
Simon, T.L. (ed.). Assessing the sustainability and biological integrity of
water resources using fish communities. CRC Press. Boca Raton, Florida. 671
pp.
Snow, J.R. 1959. Notes on the propagation of the flathead catfish,
Pilodictis olivaris (Rafinesque). Progr. Fish-Cult. 21(2):75-80.
Trautman, M.B. 1957.The Fishes of Ohio. Ohio State University Press,
Columbus, OH. 683 pp.
Turner, P.R., and R.C. Summerfelt. 1971. Reproductive biology of the
flathead catfish, Pylodictus olivais (Rafinesque), in a turbid
Oklahoma Reservoir, pp. 107-119. In: Hall, G.E. (Ed.), Reservoir
Fisheries and Limnology Am. Fish. Soc. Spec. Pub. No. 8.
Vokoun, J.C. and C.F. Rabeni. 2006. Summer diel activity and movement paths
of Flathead Catfish (Pylodictis olivaris) in two Missouri streams.
American Midland Naturalist. 155:113-122.
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
25(10):7-29.
|