A total of 174 specimens of the spined loach Cobitis taenia Linnaeus, 1758, comprising 117 females, 45 males and 12 juveniles, from Lake Klawoj (Poland) were identified as C. taenia from their karyotype (2n = 48 chromosomes). The overall sex ratio (M:F = 1:2.6) showed that females dominated in the population, but this varied with increasing fish size. Age and growth were determined based on otolith measurements. Standard lengths were back- calculated from the regression of fish standard length on the otolith radius and the growth pattern was described using the von Bertalanffy model separately for males and females, which revealed a strong fit for both females (Lt =92.4(1– exp(–0.278 (t – 0.456)); r2 = 0.803) and males (Lt=120.6(1 – exp(– 0.227 (t – 0.558); r2= 0.772). Comparison of asymptotic length with maximum observed size of males and females revealed that all values were a bit overestimated (as per the Taylor criteria). The SL – weight equations for males (W = 0.0003 SL3.8377; r2 = 0.8961) and females (W = 0.0039 SL3.1683; r2 = 0.9616) indicated allometric growth in both sexes, though more so in males than in females.
Life history traits of the vulnerable Iberian loach Cobitis calderoni were studied in the River Lozoya, a regulated river in Central Spain. A total of 163 specimens were collected on five occasions, from April to December 1990. In general C. calderoni grew isometrically and a length-frequency analysis showed 4–5 age classes. Parameters fitted to the von Bertalanffy growth model showed variation in growth rates between the sexes. The gonadosomatic index for both sexes were similar and varied among months, with the highest values in April, just before the onset of the spawning season in Spring.
The pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus, an omnivorous, nest guarding North American sunfish, was introduced into European waters about 100 years ago. To assess growth performance following introduction, we reviewed the available data for North American and European populations of pumpkinseed and compared the back-calculated age-specific growth for juveniles (standard length, SL, at age two) and adults (age two to five increment) as well as adult body size (SL at age five), von Bertalanffy growth model parameters and the index of growth (in length) performance (φ′). For continental comparisons of growth trajectory, mean growth curves for North American and Europe were calculated with the von Bertalanffy model using pooled data sets for each continent. Juvenile growth rate did not differ between European and North American pumpkinseed, but mean adult body size and adult growth rate were both significantly greater in North American than European populations. Adult body size decreased with increasing latitude (ANOVA) in North American populations, but this was not observed with adult growth rate. In contrast, adult body size tended to increase with latitude in European populations. Adult body size correlated significantly with φ′. The von Bertalanffy model described the overall growth patterns of North American and European populations reasonably well, but on the individual population level, length asymptotes were unrealistic (estimates that were > 20 % of the mean back-calculated size for the oldest age class) for a third of European populations and 80% of the North American populations. In contrast to North American pumpkinseed populations, somatic growth in European populations appears to be compromised by limited, but adequate, food resources, probably due to strong intraspecific interactions. This appears to be especially acute in adults, having potential ramifications for life span and reproductive allocation.
Colour traits can be elaborated through sexual selection and have potential to drive reproductive isolation. Male three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) express striking visual signals to attract choosy females during courtship, typically expressed as red carotenoid-based pigmentation on their throat and jaw during the breeding season, along with blue eyes and blue/green flanks. The extent and intensity of red colouration in males have been linked to fitness benefits to females, including body condition, parasite resistance, parental ability and nest defence. In some populations in the Pacific Northwest of North America, male three-spined sticklebacks express melanic nuptial colouration. In these populations, male possess black throats instead of red, and have dark or black bodies. Melanic males are associated with waterbodies that are red-shifted due to the presence of tannins, where the ambient light environment is dominated by long wavelengths. Here we report the first discovery outside North America of melanic populations of threespined sticklebacks on the island of North Uist in the Scottish Hebrides, on the northwest Atlantic coast of Europe. These populations are associated with a hotspot of stickleback morphological diversity and occur in association with red-shifted waterbodies.
The distribution and abundance of the bitterling, a small ostracophilous cyprinid species, is reanalysed on the basis of our records and a review of the recent literature. This fish, recognised as endangered or vulnerable in many European countries, shows a rapid expansion beyond its native geographical range within the limits of the former Soviet Union. In the last decades it has invaded the lower Volga, Kuban and Aras River basins and has recently started to colonise the upper Volga and upper Ural River tributaries. From the early 1980s the number of water bodies and sampling sites where the bitterling is recorded, increases steadily over the entire area examined. At the same time, bitterlings increased in abundance and became a basic species in fish assemblages of diverse water bodies including rivers (both lower and upper reaches), ponds, canals and estuaries. The spread of bitterling outside its historical range results from man-made connections of contiguous waterway systems, from unintentional introductions by aquarists or, more likely, by anglers using bitterlings as bait fish. Independent and synchronous bitterling invasions to geographically distant basins indicate that some global or macroregional factors facilitate its expansion.