|
Hybognathus placitus
Plains Minnow
Type Locality
Arkansas River, near Fort
Makee, near Cimarron, Gray Co., KS (Girard 1857).
Etymology/Derivation of Scientific Name
Hybognathus, Greek, “swollen
jaw;” placitus, Greek, meaning “a broad surface,” perhaps in reference to
the thickish snout (Pflieger 1997).
Synonymy
Hybognathus placitus Girard
1857; Gilbert 1980:178.
Hybognathus nuchalis placita
Girard; Jordan 1885:121.
Hybognathus placita Girard;
Koster 1957:70 (misidentification, in part).
Characters
Maximum size: 130 mm
TL (Page and Burr 1991).
Coloration: Back
olivaceous, middorsal stripe present; sides silvery; abdomen whitish
(Sublette et al. 1990); peritonium black (Robison and Buchanan 1988).
Counts: Pharyngeal
teeth typically 0,4-4,0; without prominent parallel grooves.
14-22 scale rows across belly (Hubbs et al 1991); 38 (34-42) lateral
line scales; rays: dorsal 8(7-9; rays 2 and 3 longer than ray 1), pectorals
16(14-18), pelvics 8(7-8), anal 8(6-10), caudal 19(16-21; Sublette et al.
1990).
Body shape: Subterete,
slightly compressed body; bluntly triangular head (Sublette et al. 1990).
Head width considerably greater than distance from tip of snout to back of
eye; eye contained in snout about two times (Hubbs et al. 1991).
Mouth position:
Subterminal (Robison and Buchanan 1988).
External morphology:
Middorsal stripe broad and solid. First obvious dorsal fin ray a thin
splint, closely attached to the following well developed but unbranched ray,
especially at tip. Lateral line usually not decurved, either straight or
with a broad arch. Premaxillaries protractile. Lower lip thin, without a
fleshy lobe; 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). Ostrand et al. (2001) demonstrated presence of sexual dimorphism
in the species, not previously desribed in any member of the genus
Hybognathus; males having relatively longer first dorsal fin rays,
larger heads, and caudal peduncles, whereas females are deeper bodied and
have relatively longer trunks, from the pelvic insertion to the anal vent;
differences between male and female in length of first dorsal fin ray
readily apparent and potentially useful for field identification (technique
used to sex fish based on dimorphism in first dorsal fin ray found to be 99%
effective in this study).
Distribution (Native and Introduced)
U.S. distribution:
Native to the Great Plains from Texas northward to North Dakota and Montana
(Hubbs et al 1991).
Texas distribution:
Range in central Texas from the Colorado and Brazos basins northward to the
Red River (Hubbs et al 1991)
Abundance/Conservation status (Federal, State, NGO)
Populations of southern
drainages are currently stable (Warren et al. 2000). Haslouer et al. (2005)
reported current status in Kansas as “species in need of conservation”;
proposed status “endangered”.
Habitat Associations
Macrohabitat: Often
abundant in open, shallow river channels with sand bottom
(Gilbert 1980). Lives in
schools near the bottom, typically occurring in association with species
including Cyprinella lutrensis, Notropis atherinoides,
Macrhybopsis storeriana, and Platygobio gracilis (Pflieger 1997).
Mesohabitat:
Essentially limited to large, often turbid rivers having exposed, shallow,
sand-filled channels (Cross et al. 1985); within such streams it is most
numerous where sediments accumulate in shallow backwaters, gentle eddies,
and along the deeper edges of sand “waves” that are formed on shifting
substrate by actions of the current (Cross and Collins 1995). Preferred
temperature of plains minnows (South Canadian River, Oklahoma), acclimated
near 21 degrees C, was near 30 degrees C at 4.8-9.0 mg/l dissolved oxygen
and dropped to 17 degrees C at 2mg/l dissolved oxygen (Bryan et al. 1984).
According to Ostrand and Wilde (2001), this species has high thermal, low
dissolved oxygen, and high salinity tolerances: mean critical thermal maxima
= 39.7 ± 0.7°C; salinity tolerance = 16 ± 1.94‰; mean minimum dissolved
oxygen tolerance = 2.08 ± 0.14 mg/L.
Biology
Spawning season: In
Kansas, April to August (Cross and Collins 1995). In Oklahoma, spawning
reported to peak in May and June with a secondary peak in August (Miller and
Robison 1973). A later study by Lehtinen and Layzer (1988) reported spawning
period from April to July based on ova diameters and gonosomatic indices
(both age I and age II reproducing); height of reproduction found to be
positively correlated with day length and temperature.
Spawning habitat:
Reproductive habits are not fully understood, but
eggs have been collected in strong currents, drifting downstream
during their development. In one instance, large schools were observed
preparing to scatter their eggs in shallow backwaters (Cross and Collins
1995).
Spawning behavior:
Presumably, eggs scattered over the substrate communally with no nest
guarding or territorial behavior (Cross 1967; Miller and Robison 1973). Eggs
are slightly demersal and nonadhesive, developing as they bounce along the
bottom (Miller and Robison 1973). Abrupt rises (flood flow) may stimulate
spawning (Lehtinen and Leyzer 1988; Cross and Collins 1995); Sliger (1967)
collected H. placitus eggs from the Cimarron River, OK, only when it
was swollen by recent heavy rains.
Fecundity: Eggs
nonadhesive and semibuoyant (Sliger 1967; Lehtinen and Layzer 1988). In
individuals collected throughout May and early June in the Cimarron River,
Oklahoma, the number of mature (ranging in size from 1.10-1.40 mm) ova
ranged from 417 to 4134 (mean = 817) in fish 51-87 mm (SL) long. Although
only a small number of the population may live to spawn at age 2, the much
greater fecundity of these individuals compensates for their lack of numbers
(Taylor and Miller 1990).
Age at maturation: 1
year of age; males and females began to mature sexually at 45-50 mm SL
(Taylor and Miller 1990).
Migration:
Longevity: Most
individuals reproducing and dying in their second summer (Taylor and Miller
1990).
Food habits: Herbivore
(Goldstein and Simon 1999). Miller and Robison (1973) speculated species
feeding on benthic microflora such as algae and diatoms. Cross and Collins
(1995) refer to the species, in Kansas, as partly herbivorous, feeding along
bottom on layer of microscopic plants (diatoms and other algae) and animals
that occur in calm, shallow backwaters. As it
possesses the same unique feeding apparatus as other Hybognathus,
Pflieger (1997) suggests the species primarily feeds on algae and other
organic bottom ooze.
Growth and Population
Structure: In the Grand River, Missouri, growth is rapid with
juveniles reaching a length of 28-43 mm by early September of their first
year (Pflieger 1997). In a Cimarron River, Oklahoma population the sex ratio
was 1:1; males and females similarly sized (Taylor and Miller 1990).
Phylogeny and morphologically similar fishes
Hybognathus placitus
resembles H. nuchalis (Mississippi silvery minnow) in most
aspects. However, N. placitus differs from the latter species in the
shape of the basiooccipital bone, in having a much smaller eye, its diameter
going 4.4-5.5 times into head length, diameter of eye lass than width of
mouth opening; and it tends to have smaller scales (15 or more scale rows
below the lateral line versus fewer than 15 in H. nuchalis; Robison
and Buchanan 1988). Lack of barbels at the corner of mouth distinguishes
H. placitus from Platygobio gracilis (flathead chub), as does the
C-shaped mouth in P. gracilis. In H. placitus, the
basiooccipital bone is narrow at the apex with a slight concave depression
equal to the width of the process; in H. amarus (Rio Grande silvery
minnow), the bone is broad and slightly concave at the apex (Sublette et al.
1990). Al-Rawi and Cross (1964) studied geographic variation in H.
placitus and chose not to recognize subspecies on the basis of
characters studied.
Host Records
Commercial or Environmental Importance
Documented declines in
abundance and distribution of Hybognathus placitus in some areas
(Cross and Moss 1987; Pigg 1987; Taylor and Miller 1990).
[Additional literature
noting collection of this species from Texas locations includes, but is not
limited to the following: lower Rio Grande River (Robinson 1959);
Canadian River (Bonner and Wilde 2000); Brazos River (Anderson et al. 1983);
Colorado and Arkansas River systems (Echelle et al.1977).]
References
Al-Rawi, A.H., and F.B. Cross. 1964. Variation in the plains minnow,
Hybognathus placitus Girard. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of
Science 67(1):154-168.
Anderson, K.A., T.L. Beitinger, and E.G. Zimmerman. 1983. Forage fish
assemblages in the Brazos River upstream and downstream from Possum Kingdom
Reservoir, Texas. Journal of Freshwater Ecology 2(1):81-88.
Bonner, T.H., and G.R. Wilde. 2000. Changes in the Canadian River fish
assemblage associated with reservoir construction. Journal of Freshwater
Ecology 15(2):189-198.
Bryan, J.D., L.G. Hill, and W.H. Neill. 1984. Interdependence of acute
temperature preference and respiration in the plains minnow. Trans. Am.
Fish. Soc. 113:557-562.
Cross, F.B. and J.T. Collins. 1995. Fishes in Kansas. University of Kansas
Natural History Museum, Kansas City. 315 pp.
Cross, F.B., and R.E. Moss. 1987. Historic changes in fish communities and
aquatic habitats in plains streams of Kansas, pp. 155-165. In:
Community and evolutionary ecology of North American stream fishes. W.J.
Matthews and D.C. Heins (eds.). Univ. of Oklahoma Press, Norman. 310 pp.
Cross, F.B., R.E. Moss, and O.T. Collins. 1985. Assessment of dewatering
impact on stream fisheries in the Arkansas and Cimarron Rivers. Mus. Nat.
Hist., Univ. Kansas, Lawrence. 375 pp.
Echelle, A.A., A.F. Echelle, and F.B. Cross. 1977. First records of
Cyprinodon rubrofluviatilis (Cyprinodontidae) from the Colorado and
Arkansas River systems, Texas. The Southwestern Naturalist 22(1):142-143.
Gilbert, C. R. 1980. Hybognathus placitus (Girard), Plains minnow.
pp. 180 in D. S. Lee, et al. Atlas of North American Freshwater
Fishes. N.C. State Mus. Nat. Hist., Raleigh, i-r+854 pp.
Girard, C. 1857. Researches upon the cyprinoid fishes inhabiting the fresh
waters of the United States of America, west of the Mississippi valley, from
specimens in the museum of the Smithsonian Institution. Proc. Acad. Nat.
Sci. Phil. (1856) 8(5):165-213.
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.
Haslouer, S.G., M.E. Eberle, D.R. Edds, K.B. Gido, C.S. Mammoliti, J.R.
Triplett, J.T. Collins, D.A. Distler, D.G. Huggins, and W.J. Stark. 2005.
Current status of native fish species in Kansas. Trans. of the Kansas
Academy of Science 108(1/2):32-46.
Hlohowskyj, C.P., M.M. Coburn, and T.M. Cavender. 1989. Comparisons of a
pharyngeal filtering apparatus in seven species of the herbivorous cyprinid
genus, Hybognathus (Pisces:Cyprinidae). Copeia 1989(1):172-183.
Hubbs, C., R. J. Edwards, and G. P. Garrett. 1991. An annotated checklist
of 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. 1885. Identification of the species of Cyprinidae and
Catostomidae, described by Dr. Charles Girard, in the Proceedings of the
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia for 1856. Proc. U.S. Natl. Mus.
8:118-127.
Koster, W.J. 1957. Guide to the Fishes of New Mexico. Univ. New Mexico
Press, Albuquerque. 116 pp.
Lehtinen, S.F., and J.B. Leyzer. 1988. Reproductive cycle of the plains
minnow, Hybognathus placitus (Cyprinidae), in the Cimarron River,
Oklahoma. The Southwestern Naturalist 33(1):27-33.
Miller, R.J., and H.W. Robison. 1973. The Fishes of Oklahoma. Okla. State.
Univ. Press, Stillwater. 246 pp.
Ostrand, K.G., and G.R. Wilde. 2001. Temperature, dissolved oxygen, and
salinity tolerances of five prairie stream fishes and their role in
explaining fish assemblage patterns. Trans. Amer. Fish. Soc. 130:742-749.
Ostrand, K.G., G.R. Wilde, R.E. Strauss, and R.R. Young. 2001. Sexual
dimorphism in plains minnows, Hybognathus placitus. Copeia 2001(2):563-565.
Page, L. M., and B. M. Burr. 1991. A Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes of
North America, north of Mexico. Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 432 pp.
Pflieger, W. L. 1997. The Fishes of Missouri. Missouri Department of
Conservation, Jefferson City, 372 pp.
Pigg, J. 1987. Survey of fishes in the Oklahoma Panhandle and Harper County,
northwestern Oklahoma. Proc. Okla. Acad. Sci. 67:45-59.
Robinson, D.T. 1959. The Ichthyofauna of the lower Rio Grande, Texas and
Mexico. Copeia 1959(3): 253-256.
Sliger, A.S. 1967. The embryology, egg structure, micropyle, and egg
membranes of the plains minnow, Hybognathus placitus (Girard). Unpubl.
M.S. Thesis, Oklahoma State Univ., Stillwater. 55 pp.
Sublette, J.E., M.D. Hatch, and M. Sublette. 1990. The Fishes of New Mexico.
University of Albuquerque Press, Albuquerque. 393 pp.
Taylor, C.M., and R.J. Miller. 1990. Reproductive ecology and population
structure of the plains minnow, Hybognathus placitus (Pisces:
Cyprinidae), in central Oklahoma. American Midland Naturalist 123(1):32-39.
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.
|