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Lepomis miniatus
redspotted sunfish
Type Locality
Tangipahoa River, Louisiana
(Jordan 1877).
Etymology/Derivation of Scientific Name
Lepomis: scaled
operculum; miniatus: scarlet, in reference to the diagnostic red
spots on males (Ross 2001).
Synonymy
Lepiopomis miniatus
Jordan 1877c:26.
Lepomis miniatus
Evermann 1899:310.
Lepomis punctatus miniatus
Cook 1959:179.
Lepomis punctatus
Caldwell 1966:221, Medford and Simco 1971:122; Pierson et al. 1986:13;
Hubbard 1987:23; Boschung 1989:83; Mettee et al. 1989:128; Hubbard et al.
1991:10; Becket et al. 1992:131.
Characters
Maximum size: 137 mm
(Beckett et al. 1992).
Life colors: No dark
spot at posterior base of dorsal fin (Hubbs et al. 1991). Adults have
square, red or purplish red (in males) or yellowish (in females) spots along
the sides forming irregular rows. The cheeks have dark, coffee-colored
spots. The back is dark brown or olive, the belly is reddish orange, and the
opercular spot is black with a narrow white or reddish border. The fins are
dusky, with the margins of median fins reddish orange. The front and back of
the iris is reddish and the lower part light blue or turquoise (Ross 2001).
Scale counts: There
are 35-41 (34-42) lateral line scales, 11 dorsal rays, 10 anal rays, and
13-14 pectoral rays (Warren 1992; Ross 2001); 3 anal spines (rarely 2 or 4);
6-13 dorsal fin spines; 6 or 7 branchiostegals (Hubbs et al. 1991). Breast
scale rows 13-15 (11-16; Ross 2001), these are counted from the scale at the
lower base of the pectoral fin insertion downward and forward to ventral
midline, then upward and backward from the lower insertion of the right
pectoral fin (Cashner and Suttkus 1977).
Body shape: Deep,
slab-sided (Pflieger 1997). Body depth usually contained two to two and
one-half times in SL (Hubbs et al. 1991).
Mouth position:
Moderate-sized mouth (Pflieger 1997).
External morphology:
Gill rakers in adults short, when depressed not reaching base of second
raker below; supramaxilla one-third width of maxilla; lateral line complete;
opercle stiff to its margin (not including membrane); posterior edge of
opercle within opercular membrane smooth; pectoral fins short and rounded;
pectoral fin contained 3.75 or more times in SL; no teeth on tounge or
pterygoids; scales ctenoid (Hubbs et al. 1991). Rear margin of lower jaw
extends past the front of the eye. Caudal fin emarginate (Ross 2001).
Distribution (Native and Introduced)
U.S. distribution:
Lepomis miniatus occurs in the Mississippi River valley from the
Illinois River to the Gulf Coast, west along the Gulf of Mexico drainages to
eastern Texas and into the Rio Grande Basin, and eastward into the Mobile
Basin (Lee 1980; Warren 1990, 1992).
Texas distribution:
May be found in most drainages in Texas, with the exception of streams in
the northwestern part of the state (Hubbs et al. 1991). Warren et al. (2000)
list the following drainage units for distribution of L. miniatus in
the state: Red River (from the mouth upstream to an dincluding 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)
Populations in the southern
United States are currently stable (Warren et al. 2000).
Habitat Associations
Macrohabitat: Streams,
swamps (Ross 2001; Boshung and Mayden 2004).
Mesohabitat: Found in
pool, chute, riffle, and backwater, run habitats in the San Antonio River,
Texas (Edwards 1999). Species collected from pool habitat in the lower
Brazos River, Texas (Gelwick and Li 2002). Found in heavily vegetated,
sluggish waters (Boschung and Mayden 2004). Species occurs in streams,
including those along the coastal region of Mississippi in areas of low
salinity (Ross 2001). In Mississippi,
Peterson (1991) noted the condition of fish appeared to be poorer at
salinities above 4 ppt, perhaps due to the metabolic expense of maintaining
proper water balance. Habitats of this species in the upper reaches of Lamar
Creek, Mississippi, averaged 33 cm in depth and were in areas of very slowly
moving water (0.4 cm/s). Compared to other sunfishes, L. miniatus
occurred over finer substrata in very weedy habitats (Ross et al. 1987).
Occur most abundantly in the clearer and more sluggish ditches in the
Lowlands of Missouri, where aquatic plants are abundant; and in the Ozark
streams it occurs in quiet pools near boulders and submerged logs and in
clear, heavily vegetated backwaters (Pflieger 1997). L. miniatus
tolerates higher salinities than other Lepomis (Carlander 1977).
L. miniatus X L. punctatus hybrids reported to have
been collected from the Escambia River, FL, in salinities from 5.0 ppt. at
the surface to 24.4 ppt at the bottom (Boshung and Mayden 2004).
Biology
Spawning season: L.
miniatus spawn in Illinois during May (Pflieger 1997). In Mississippi,
most likely spawns in late spring or summer (Ross 2001). In Missouri,
nesting activity observed in early July (Pflieger 1997).
Spawning location:
Nests are built in shallow water, often within 30 cm of shore (Ross 2001).
Nests were found in water only a few inches in depth among the stems of
water willow, over a bottom of sand and gravel. L. miniatus usually a
solitary nester; however, on occasion two or more males build nests so close
together that they become confluent (Pflieger 1997).
Reproductive Strategy:
Nests are actively defended (Ross 2001). Gerald (1971) studied sound
production in this species in Hays Co., Texas. During courtship, nesting
male rushes toward a female and then turns rapidly back to the nest,
producing a series of grunts throughout the entire process. The sound
production may serve as a species-specific signal helping to orient the
female to the male.
Fecundity:
Age at maturation:
Migration:
Longevity:
Food habits:
Invertebrate feeder. Species feeds primarily on benthic prey. In Lake
Ponchartrain, Louisiana, major food items included small crustaceans
(particularly gammarid amphipods) and midges (chironomids); large fish fed
to a greater extent on mud crabs (Rhithropanopeus) and sponges
(sponges especially important in winter; Desselle et al. 1978). In Davis
Bayou, Mississippi, small L. miniatus depended on zooplankton,
whereas larger fish shifted their diets to benthic macrofauna. This species
often used submerged aquatic vegetation-associated prey; however,
sediment-associated and water-column associated prey were used also
(Vanderkooy et al. 2000).
Growth:
Phylogeny and morphologically similar fishes
Lepomis miniatus
previously considered a subspecies of L. punctatus (Warren 1992).
The redspotted sunfish is
distinguished from all congeners, except L. punctatus, by the
iridescent turquoise crescent outlining the ventral curvature of the
otherwise dark red iris and uniformly silvery, creamy, pinkish, or white
narrow margins on the dorsal, caudal, and anal fins (Boschung and Mayden
2004). It is distinguished from L. punctatus by the following:
Breeding males have rows of spots from one to two scale rows below the
lateral line to the belly; the red orange pigment covers the scale centers,
and the rows resemble a chain of rough triangles with anteriorly directed,
truncated apices. Breeding males also have red orange pigment covering the
breast, belly, and dorsal margin of the opercular tab and three quadrate to
circular blotches located below the middorsal margin of the operculum and
anterior to the black opercular spot, above the opercular tab, and just
above and behind the eye, the latter usually diffuse. Breeding males usually
have no discrete, dark spots of the anterior exposed scale bases of the
body; if present, spots on the body are diffuse or only slightly darker than
the dorsal and ventral scale margins and do not form horizontal rows (Warren
1992).
Host Records
Leptorhynchoides thecatus
(adult ; Steinauer et al. 2006). Camallanus oxycephalus and
Spinitectus carolini (Fiorillo and Font 1999). Cestoda:
Bothriocephalus,
Proteocephalidae; Trematoda: Clinostomum
marginatum, Crepidostomum cooperi, Diplostomatidae, Halipegus, Homalometron
armatum, Posthodiplostomum minimum, Proterometra macrostoma, Textrema
hopkinsi;
Nemata: Camallanus oxycephalus, Capillaria,
Spinitectus carolini, Spinitectus gracilis, Spinitectus micracanthus,
Spiroxys contorta; Acanthocephala: Leptorhynchoides thecatus,
Neoechinorhynchus clyindratum, Pomphorhynchus bulbocolli
(Mayberry et al 2000).
Commercial or Environmental
Importance
[Additional literature
noting collection of this species (previously referred to as Lepomis
punctatus) from Texas locations includes, but is not limited to the
following: Hubbs (1957); lower Rio Grande River (Robinson 1959); Bosque
River (Linam and Kleinsasser 1987); Cow Bayou (Linam and Kleinsasser
1987);Village Creek (Neches River; Moriarty and Winemiller 1997); San
Antonio River (Edwards 2001).]
References
Becket, D. C., B. J. Viskup, and S. T. Ross. 1992. Occurrence of Lepomis
(Osteichthyes: Centrarchidae) in Horn Island ponds. Northeast Gulf Sci.
12(2):129-133.
Boschung, H. T. 1989. Atlas of fishes of the upper Tombigbee River drainage,
Alabama-Mississippi. Proc. S.E. Fishes Council 19:1-104.
Boschung, H.T., Jr., and Mayden, R.L. 2004. Fishes of Alabama. Smithsonian
Books, Washington, D.C. 736 pp.
Caldwell, R. D. 1966. Fishes from the freshwater streams of the Biloxi Bay
and St. Louis Bay drainage systems of Mississippi. J. Miss. Acad. Sci.
12:213-231.
Carlander, K. D.
1977. Handbook of Freshwater Fishery Biology. The Iowa State University
Press, Ames, Vol. 2:431 pp.
Cashner, R.C., and R.D. Suttkus. 1977. Ambloplites constellatus, a
new species of rock bass from the Ozark upland of Arkansas and Missouri with
a review of western rock bass populations. American Midland Naturalist
98(1):147-161.
Cook, F. A. 1959. Freshwater fishes in Mississippi. Mississippi Game and
Fish Commission, Jackson.
Desselle, W. J. and M. A. Pourrier, J. S. Rogers, and R. C. Cashner. 1978. A
discriminant functions analysis of sunfish (Lepomis) food habits and
feeding niche segregation in the Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana, estuary.
Trans. Amer. Fish. Soc. 107:713-719.
Edwards, R.J. 1999. Ecological profiles for selected stream-dwelling Texas
freshwater fishes II. Report to the Texas Water Development Board. 69 pp.
Edwards, R.J. 2001. Ecological profiles for selected stream-dwelling Texas
freshwater fishes III. Report to the Texas Water Development Board. 59 pp.
Evermann, B. W. 1899. Report on investigations by the U.S. Fish Commission
in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas, in 1897. Rept. U.S. Fish Comm.
24:287-310.
Fiorillo, R.A., and W.F. Font. 1999. Seasonal dynamics and community
structure of helminthes of spotted sunfish, Lepomis miniatus
(Osteichthyes: Centrarchidae) from an oligohaline estuary in southeastern
Louisiana, U.S.A. Journal of the Helminthological Society of Washington
66:101-110.
Gelwick, F.P., and R.Y. Li. 2002. Mesohabitat use and community structure of
Brazos River fishes in the vicinity of the proposed Allens Creek Reservoir.
Report to the Texas Water Development Board. 25 pp.
Hubbard, W. D. 1987. Distribution and diversity of fishes in the Noxubee
River drainage, Mississippi. J. Miss. Acad. Sci. 32:19-30.
Hubbard, W. D., C. E. Tucker, and H. Boschung. 1991. Fishes of the
Sucarnoochee River system, Alabama and Mississippi. Proc. S.E. Fishes
Council 24:1-11.
Hubbs, C. 1957. Distributional patterns of Texas fresh-water fishes. The
Southwestern Naturalist 2(2-3):89-104.
Hubbs, C., R. J.
Edwards, and G. P. Garrett. 1991. An annotated checklist of freshwater
fishes of Texas, with key to identification of species. Texas Journal of
Science, Supplement 43(4):1-56
Jordan, D. S. 1877. Contributions to North American ichthyology, based
primarily on the collections of the United States National Museum. No. 2A.
Notes on Cottidae, Etheotomatidae, Percidae, Centrarchidae, Aphredoderidae,
Dorysomatidae, and Cyprinidae, with revisions of the genera and descriptions
of new or little known species. Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus. 10:1-68.
Lee, D. S. 1980. Lepomis punctatus (Valenciennes), spotted sunfish,
p. 602. in D. S. Lee, et al. Atlas of North American Freshwater
Fishes. N. C. State Mus. Nat. Hist., Raleigh, i-r+854 pp.
Linam, G.W., and L.J. Kleinsasser. 1987 (Revised 1989). Fisheries use
attainability study for the Bosque River. River Studies Report No. 4.
Resource Protection Division. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Austin.
24 pp.
Linam, G.W., and L.J. Kleinsasser. 1987. Fisheries use attainability study
for Cow Bayou (segment 0511). River Studies Report No. 5. Resource
Protection Division. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Austin. 14 pp.
Mayberry, L. F.,
A. G. Canaris, and J. R. Bristol. 2000. Bibliography of parasites and
vertebrate host in Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas (1893-1984). University of
Nebraska Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology Web Server pp. 1-100.
Medford, D. W., and B. A. Simco. 1971. The fishes of the Wolf Fiver,
Tennessee and Mississippi. J. Tenn. Acad. Sci. 46(4):121-123.
Mettee, M. F., P. R. O'Neil, R. D. Suttkus, and J. M. Pierson. 1989. Fishes
of the western Mobile River Basin in Alabama and Mississippi. Atlas 24.
Geological Survey of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.
Moriarty, L.J., and K.O. Winemiller. 1997. Spatial and temporal variation in
fish assemblage structure in Village Creek, Hardin County, Texas. Texas
Journal of Science, Supplement 49(3):85-110.
Peterson, M. S. 1991. Differential length-weight relations among
centrarchids (Pisces: Centrarchidae) from tidal freshwater and oligohaline
wetland habitats. Wetlands 11(2):325-332.
Pflieger, W. L. 1997. The Fishes of Missouri. Missouri Department of
Conservation, Jefferson City, 372 pp.
Pierson, J. M., C. A. Schultz, and H. T. Boschung. 1986. Fishes of the
Buttahatchee River system of Alabama and Mississippi. Proc. S.E. Fishes
Council. 4(4):11-13.
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Mexico. Copeia 1959(3):253-256.
Ross, S. T. 2001. The Inland Fishes of Mississippi. University Press of
Mississippi, Jackson. 624 pp.
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of southeastern stream fishes: temporal and spatial predictability, pp.
42-51. In: Evolutionary and community ecology of North American
stream fishes. W. J. Matthews and D. C. Heins, eds. Univ. Oklahoma Press,
Norman.
Steinauer, M.L., J.E. Parham, B.B. Nickol. 2006 Geographic analysis of host
use, development, and habitat use of an acanthocephalan species,
Leptorhynchoides thecatus. J. Parasitol. 92(3):464-472.
Vanderkooy, K.E., C.F. Rakocinski, and R.W. Heard. 2000. Trophic
relationships of three sunfishes (Lepomis spp.) in an estuarine bayou.
Estuaries 23(5):621-632.
Warren, M. L., Jr. 1990. Occurrence of the spotted sunfish, Lepomis
punctatus, in the Devils River, Texas. Southwest. Nat. 35(3):349-351.
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punctatus complex (Centrarchidae): meristics, morphometrics,
pigmentation and species limits. Bull. Ala. Mus. Nat. Hist. 12:1-47.
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Jr., B. M. Burr, S. J. Walsh, H. L. Bart, Jr., R. C. Cashner, D. A. Etnier,
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