The Topeka shiner
Notropis topeka is native to Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, and South Dakota (Lee et al., 1980) and has been federally listed as endangered for two decades (Tabor, 1998).
The Spottail Shiner,
Notropis hudsonius is common along the Atlantic coast, from the Altamaha drainage in Georgia north to the Connecticut and Thames drainages, throughout most of the St.
Parasites of spottail shiners (
Notropis hudsonius) in the St.
While, Durham and Wilde [31] showed that the combination of asynchronous and synchronous spawning by using three patterns or methods commonly used to assess reproductive ecology which are oocyte development, gonadosomatic index and oocyte size distribution for pelagic broadcast-spawning cyprinids, smalleye shiner,
Notropis buccula in North American Great.
The MRG has experienced the extinction of two fishes (
Notropis simus simus and
Notropis orca; Edwards et al., 2002; D.
Despite this accumulated information, population trend and distributional knowledge gaps still exist for many species, including three species recently collected from the La Grange Reach of the lower Illinois River: Shoal Chub Macrhybopsis hyostoma, Channel Shiner
Notropis wickliffi, and Banded Darter Etheostoma zonale.
danilewskyi Caa-1 into goldfish and other fish species like Barbus conhus, Danio malabaricus, Catostomus commersoni, Etheostoma caeruleum,
Notropis cormitus and Perca flavescens.
Fish and Wildlife Service's (Service) Partners for Fish and Wildlife Program with endangered species habitat restorations has served as a major stepping stone towards recovery for the endangered Topeka shiner (
Notropis topeka).
Los peces nativos recolectados en el area de la REBIOSH, estan integrados en siete familias (Atherinopsidae, Ictaluridae, Goodeidae, Characidae, Poeciliidae, Cichlidae y Cyprinidae) y siete especies, de las cuales tres son endemicas de la cuenca del Balsas (Atherinella balsana, Ictalurus balsanus e Ilyodon whitei), y cuatro nativas de la misma (Cichlasoma istlanum, Poecilia maylandi, Astyanax aeneus y
Notropis moralesi).
in
Notropis hudsonius showed to increase in abundance in the early summer and then to decrease during fall and followed spring.
Seven species not previously reported from Cox Creek included: river chub Nocomis micropogon (Cope), telescope shiner
Notropis telescopus (Cope), golden redhorse Moxostoma erythrurum (Rafinesque), chain pickerel Esox niger Lesueur, smallmouth bass Micropterus dolomieu Lacepede, greenside darter Etheostoma blennioides (Rafinesque), and banded darter Etheostoma zonale (Cope).