Aphredoderus sayanus
FAMILY
Aphredoderidae
TAXONOMY
Scolopsis sayanus (Gilliams, 1824), fishponds, Harrowgate, “near
Philadelphia.” Two subspecies have been proposed.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
German: Piratenbarsch.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Grows to 5.51 in (14.0 cm). A short, deep body, with a large
head and mouth and a protruding jaw. They lack an adipose
fin, and the lateral line is either absent or incomplete. The
head is covered by ctenoid scales on the sides.
DISTRIBUTION
This species is found in waters of the Atlantic and Gulf slopes,
the Mississippi Valley, and scattered parts of the eastern Great
Lakes Basin in the United States from Minnesota south
through the Mississippi Valley across the Gulf coast to Florida
and north along the Atlantic coast to New York. It also can be
found in the southeastern corner of Oklahoma, in the easternmost
tributaries of the Red River, and throughout the Coastal
Plain of Arkansas (but not in the Ozark Mountains). There are
isolated populations in the Lake Ontario and Lake Erie
drainages in New York, and the species has been reported in
Wisconsin outside what is considered their native range, which
suggests introduction. Populations on the Atlantic slope have
been considered a subspecies (Aphredoderus sayanus sayanus) distinct
from the subpopulation of the Mississippi Valley (A. s.
gibbosus). The populations from the Gulf of Mexico drainage
have been termed intermediate.
HABITAT
They usually occur over mud in quiet bodies of water, such as
swamps, vegetated sloughs, ponds, oxbow lakes, ditches, backwaters,
and pools of creeks and in small to large rivers on mud
and silt bottoms. Adults most frequently are found at sites
whose bottoms are overlain with leaf litter. The larvae of this
species can be quite abundant in some areas.
BEHAVIOR
This is a solitary and crepuscular species.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
They feed on insects, blue-green algae, and small crustaceans
and fishes, which suggests that, like other members of this order,
they are an opportunistic species that goes after almost
any food item. Vulnerable to dragonfly nymphs, larger fishes,
water snakes, and fish-eating birds.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
The major spawning period for pirate perch in the Atchafalaya
River Basin, Louisiana, is February through March. It appears
that adult pirate perch are not branchial brooders but rather
release their adhesive eggs over leaf litter and woody debris.
They can live up to four years or longer.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not listed by the IUCN.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
This species is considered a water quality indicator species by
the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality for the
Gulf Coastal Ecoregion.
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