scholarly journals Health status of Largescale Sucker (Catostomus macrocheilus) collected along an organic contaminant gradient in the lower Columbia River, Oregon and Washington, USA

2014 ◽  
Vol 484 ◽  
pp. 353-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leticia Torres ◽  
Elena Nilsen ◽  
Robert Grove ◽  
Reynaldo Patiño

ABSTRACT The Lewis and Clark expedition crossed the Continental Divide in 1805 on the way west to the Pacific Ocean. Based on journal entries, members of the expedition probably encountered two species of resident salmonids and four of the six species of anadromous salmonids and steelhead (Family Salmonidae, genus <em>Oncorhynchus</em>). The salmonid species were called common salmon (now known as Chinook salmon <em>O. tshawytscha</em>), red charr (sockeye salmon <em>O. nerka</em>), white salmon trout (coho salmon [also known as silver salmon] <em>O. kisutch</em>), salmon trout (steelhead <em>O. mykiss</em>), and spotted trout (cutthroat trout <em>O. clarkii</em>). There was no evidence of the expedition encountering pink salmon <em>O. gorbuscha</em>, chum salmon <em>O. keta</em>, or species of true char <em>Salvelinus</em> spp. Common fishes procured from Indian tribes living along the lower Columbia River included eulachon <em>Thaleichthys pacificus</em> and white sturgeon <em>Acipenser transmontanus</em>. The identity of three additional resident freshwater species is questionable. Available descriptions suggest that what they called mullet were largescale sucker <em>Catostomus macrocheilus</em>, and that chubb were peamouth <em>Mylocheilus caurinus</em>. The third questionable fish, which they called bottlenose, was probably mountain whitefish <em>Prosopium williamsoni</em>, although there is no evidence that the species was observed in the Columbia River drainage. Missing from the species list were more than 20 other fishes known to Sahaptin-speaking people from the mid-Columbia region. More complete documentation of the icthyofauna of the Pacific Northwest region did not occur until the latter half of the 19th century. However, journals from the Lewis and Clark expedition provide the first documentation of Columbia River fishes.


1980 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 356-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Dale Becker

Fish were surveyed for haematozoa from the central Columbia River, state of Washington, U.S.A., from 1968 to 1978. The 840 individuals examined represented 12 families and 34 species. Most infections occurred in sucker (Catostomidae) and sculpin (Cottidae). Nine species of fish were parasitized by one or two species of haematozoa. Intensities of all detected parasitemias were low, indicating no symptomatic damage to infected hosts.Trypanoplasma salmositica (Katz 1951) was recorded for the first time in white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus), largescale sucker (Catostomus macrocheilus), bridgelip sucker (C. columbianus), northern squawfish (Ptychocheilus oregonensis), and sculpin of the Cottus confusus/bairdi complex; it was also found again in prickly (C. asper) and piute (C. beldingi) sculpin. Haemogregarina catostomi Becker 1962 occurred in about 23% each of largescale and bridgelip sucker. Other haematozoa encountered were a haemogregarine in 1 of 23 steelhead (Salmo gairdneri), a haemogregarine in 3 of 92 sculpin (Cottus spp.), and a dactylosome in 1 of 10 American shad (Alosa sapidissima).The sequence of Haemogregarina catostomi occurrence in erythrocytes was the following: young gametocytes in the fall, mature gametocytes in winter, degenerative gametocytes in spring, and absence of infection in summer. The piscicolid leeches Myzobdella lugubris Leidy and Piscicola salmositica Meyer might transmit haematozoa among fish in the survey area.


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