Crystal darter

Crystal darter
Crystal darter
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Percidae
Genus: Crystallaria
Species: C. asprella
Binomial name
Crystallaria asprella
Jordan, 1878

The crystal darter, Crystallaria asprella, is a small North American fish found in small, moderate, and swift rivers in the drainage basins of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers. It is now extirpated from a majority of its range along the Ohio River. The crystal darter and the diamond darter are the only members of their genus.

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Other Names

Until recently, the crystal darter's species name was Ammocrypta asprella, but this name is now considered invalid. When this fish was discovered in 1878, it was given the name Pleurolepis asprellus.

Appearance

The crystal darter can grow to 5 inches in length. It is olive-colored to tan with four dark saddles extending downward to its lateral line, a brownish stripe, and a whitish belly. Its maximum reported age is 3 years.

Conservation

The crystal darter is listed as vulnerable by the IUCN on its Red List because of "a decline in area of occupancy, extent of occurrence and/or quality of habitat." It is also listed as a special concern species in Minnesota by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources and in Arkansas by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission; as an endangered species in Wisconsin by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources and in Missouri by the Missouri Department of Conservation; as an extirpated species in Illinois by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources; and as a tier 1, or critically impaired, species in Mississippi by the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks because of "extreme rarity (5 or fewer occurrences or very few remaining individuals or acres) or because of some factor(s) making it vulnerable to extirpation."

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