Leatherside chub

Leatherside chub
Northern Leatherside Chub
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Cypriniformes
Family: Cyprinidae
Subfamily: Leuciscinae
Genus: Snyderichthys
R. R. Miller, 1945
Species: S. copei
Binomial name
Snyderichthys copei
(D. S. Jordan & C. H. Gilbert, 1881)
Synonyms

Squalius copei Jordan & Gilbert, 1881

NOTE: The leatherside chubs in this article have been split into two species, northern leatherside chub, Lepidomeda copei, and southern leatherside chub, Lepidomeda aliciae (Johnson et al. 2004, Page et al. 2013). Snyderichthys copei is no longer used.

The leatherside chub, Snyderichthys copei is a cyprinid fish of western North America.

This is a small fish, reported at up to 15 cm (6 in) in length, but more typically half that. The tapered body is covered with very small scales over a skin with a leathery texture, inspiring the common name. Overall color is bluish dorsally and silver ventrally; males are distinguished by patches of orange-red color on the axils of the paired fins, at the base of the anal fin, and along the lower lobe of the tail, as well as golden-red specks at the upper end of the gill opening, and between eye and upper jaw. Unlike most other minnows, both dorsal and anal fins have eight rays.

Its habitat is cooler creeks and rivers with moderate currents, where the adults congregate in pools or riffles, while the young favor quiet areas with brush near the shore.

Leatherside chubs range from the upper Snake River system in Idaho and Wyoming south to the Sevier River in Utah, being commonly found in the rivers draining into the Great Salt Lake and Utah Lake. They have been introduced into the Colorado River system, such as Strawberry Reservoir and Price River in Utah.

This chub has been extensively used as fishing bait.

Originally named Squalius copei and later placed in Gila, this chub was separated into a monotypic genus in 1945. This placement was eventually verified using mtDNA 12S rRNA sequence data. It seems a fairly close relative of the spinedaces (genus Lepidomeda) and the spikedaces (genus Meda), but the phylogeny and indeed the validity of the proposed "plagopterin" clade is insufficiently resolved (Simons & Mayden 1997).

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, July 14, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.