- Tui chub
Taxobox
name = Tui chub
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis =Actinopterygii
ordo =Cypriniformes
familia =Cyprinidae
genus = "Gila"
species = "G. bicolor"
binomial = "Gila bicolor"
binomial_authority = (Girard,1856 )The tui chub "Gila bicolor" is a
cyprinid fish native to westernNorth America . Widespread in many areas, it is an important food source for other fish, including thecutthroat trout .The form and appearance of the tui chub is variable; many were originally described as different species by
J. O. Snyder , but have since been reduced to subspecies. In general, the color is deep olive above and white below, with a smooth variation in shading along the sides, and a brassy reflection. Fins are olive and sometimes tinted with red. The pectoral fins are far forward and low on the body. Length has been recorded at up to 45 cm, but 25 cm is more typical.Tui chub diet is varied; young fish eat mostly invertebrates, adding plant material and especially algae as they mature. Habits also vary by location and the fineness of the
gill raker s, so for instance fine-rakered forms inPyramid Lake feed more onplankton in open water than the coarse-rakered forms, who live near the bottom and eats more plants and algae. The largest individuals will eat other fish also.Tui chubs are found in a variety of habitats, including anything from small streams to large lakes and reservoirs, and both high cold lakes (Tahoe) and warmer desert streams.
They spawn anywhere between late April and early August, depending on temperatures. In Pyramid Lake the peak season is June; males move inshore first, then congregate around arriving females in shallow water, preferring areas of heavy vegetation. The female scatters her eggs randomly over a wide area, where they are then fertilized by several males. The hatchlings remain in the heavy vegetation for the remainder of the summer. In Lake Tahoe some chubs spawn around stream mouths in July.
The tui chub's range includes the Lahontan and Central system of the
Great Basin , as well as the Owens andMojave River s. It is found in thePit River and Goose Lake of the upper Central Valley, in theKlamath River system, and in theColumbia River drainage.Subspecies
The exact number of subspecies is not known; Sigler & Sigler estimate as high as 16. Agreed subspecies include:
* "
Gila bicolor bicolor "
* "Gila bicolor isolata "
* "Gila bicolor mohavensis "
* "Gila bicolor obesa "
* "Gila bicolor pectinifer "
* "Gila bicolor snyderi "References
*
* William F. Sigler and John W. Sigler, "Fishes of the Great Basin" (Reno: University of Nevada Press, 1987), pp. 166-170
*FishBase_species|genus=Gila|species=bicolor|year=2006|month=March
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