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Two new Noturus

Posted: 09 Dec 2005, 20:22
by Silurus
Burr, BM, DJ Eisenhour & JM Grady, 2005. Two New Species of Noturus (Siluriformes: Ictaluridae) from the Tennessee River Drainage: Description, Distribution, and Conservation Status. Copeia 2005: 783-802.

Abstract

Nominotypical Noturus elegans are herein restricted to the Green River drainage of central Kentucky and north-central Tennessee. Ten specimens and additional new material from the Duck River originally allocated to N. elegans are here described as a new species, Noturus fasciatus, restricted to the Duck River system and two minor tributaries of the lower arm of the Tennessee River, Tennessee. A second new species, Noturus crypticus, is described from the only known extant population in Little Chucky Creek, Greene County, Tennessee. These three taxa are closely related and are distinguished on the basis of modal differences in anal-fin ray numbers, body shape, pigmentation, and genotypic arrays. Noturus crypticus is described from only eight specimens, is clearly uncommon, probably relict, and in need of federal protection and future propagation efforts. All three species are primarily riffle/glide dwellers in small- to medium-sized streams where they may be found in or under gravel, rubble, and slab rock. The limited geographic distributions of the two new species places them at greater risk of extinction, warranting comprehensive evaluation of their life histories, demographic characteristics, recruitment rates, and nesting requirements.

Posted: 09 Dec 2005, 21:20
by djw66
Makes me sad to read this. The creek near my old house used to be rift with a jet-black madtom (species unknown). When I visited the area again a couple years ago, the creek had been mined for gravel to a meter deep, and it was a muddy mess. There wasn't a madtom to be seen.

The sites mentioned in the abstract are a couple hours north of here.

Dave

Posted: 31 Dec 2005, 16:01
by Nothonotus
What creek/drainage did you used to live by? I might be able to tell you what it was or hopefully where other populations may be.