词条 | Cypress minnow |
释义 |
| name = Cypress minnow | status = LC | status_system = IUCN3.1 | status_ref = [1] | taxon = Hybognathus hayi | display_parents = 3 | authority = D. S. Jordan, 1885 }} The Cypress minnow (Hybognathus hayi) is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish from the carp family Cyprinidae. It is endemic to the United States where it occurs in the Mississippi and Ohio drainages as well as some other rivers which drain into the Gulf of Mexico. DescriptionThe Cypress minnow is a rather stout-bodied, silvery fish which had reasonable large eyes and a small, upward pointing mouth. The scales on anterior portio of the flanks have prominent dark edges which form an obvious diamond-shaped pattern. There are no barbels. There is a distinct dusky or greenish-golden strip down the centre of the yellowish-olive back, this stripe is wider than the base of the dorsal fin, the back also has emerald spots. The flanks are silvery, lacking any dusky stripe while the belly is. The fins lack any markings. The males develop tubercules over most of the body when breeding. Adults are {{convert|76.2|mm|in}} to {{convert|152.4|mm|in}} in length.[2] DistributionThe Cypress minnow is endemic to the United States where it is found in the Ohio and River basins from south western Indiana to southern Illinois south to Louisiana. It is also found in the Escambia River in Florida and Alabama and in the Sabine River in Texas.[3] HabitatThe Cypress minnow is a lowland species which occurs in the backwaters of large, sluggish rivers and in oxbow lakes over substrates of sand, silt and organic debris. It avoids areas with faster currents.[2] BiologyThe Cypress minnow has a lengthy intestine, which loops a number of times and the length intestinal tract is suggestive of a herbivorous diet digesting plant matter. This is supported by a study in Kentucky which found that these fish consumed sand, detritus, algae and other plant materials. These fish reach sexual maturity at around a year old, at a length of {{convert|50.8|mm|in}} to {{convert|76.2|mm|in}}. They appear to spawn in the spring, and as in its congeners the eggs are likely that to be scattered over the substrate with no parental care of either the eggs or the young.[2] ConservationThe Cypress minnow is not common and has been described as being sporadic or rare, and to have declined drastically in abundance at the edges of its range in the states of Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, Oklahoma, Florida, and Arkansas. However, its historical range within most of these states was rather limited in extent. The species was collected in Indiana since the early 1940s where it is known from 4 localities and it was only recently rediscovered in Missouri and Illinois. Cypress minnows may have become extinct in the southern bend of the Tennessee River in Alabama. In the core parts of the range, recent surveys indicate that the species is apparently maintaining its populations. The population trend is uncertain but the Cypress minnow probably has a relatively stable or slowly declining population.[1] References1. ^1 {{cite journal | author = NatureServe | year = 2013 | title = Hybognathus hayi | journal = The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species |volume = 2013 | page = e.T202112A18235270 | doi = 10.2305/IUCN.UK.2013-1.RLTS.T202112A18235270.en}} 2. ^1 2 {{cite web | url = https://nature.mdc.mo.gov/discover-nature/field-guide/cypress-minnow | title = Cypress Minnow Hybognathus hayi | accessdate = 19 November 2017 | publisher = Missouri Department of Conservation}} 3. ^{{cite web | url = http://www.fishbase.org/summary/Hybognathus-hayi.html | title = Hybognathus hayi Jordan, 1885 Cypress minnow | accessdate = 19 November 2017 | publisher = Fishbase | editor1 = Rainer Froese | editor2 = Daniel Pauly | year = 2017}}
3 : Hybognathus|Fish described in 1885|Freshwater fish of the United States |
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