Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 01 Feb 2004

Spawning Behavior and Genetic Parentage in the Pirate Perch (Aphredoderus sayanus), a Fish with an Enigmatic Reproductive Morphology

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Page Range: 1 – 10
DOI: 10.1643/CE-03-160R
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Abstract

We describe for the first time reproductive behaviors in the Pirate Perch (Aphredoderus sayanus), a secretive nocturnal fish whose urogenital opening is positioned far anteriorally, under its throat. Some naturalists had speculated that this peculiar morphological condition might serve to promote egg transfer to the fish's branchial chamber for gill-brooding; others hypothesized that Pirate Perch spawn in the substrate of streams but offered no adaptive rationale for the odd placement of the fish's urogenital pore. Here we solve the conundrum through a combination of intensive field investigations, underwater filming, and molecular parentage analyses. We show that Pirate Perch spawn in underwater root masses, the first documentation of such nesting behavior in any species of North American fish. Female Pirate Perch thrust their heads and release their eggs into sheltered canals of these masses. Males congregate at these sites and likewise enter the narrow canals headfirst, to release sperm. Thus, the forward-shifted urogenital pore may facilitate spawning under this special nesting circumstance. We found no evidence of extended parental care. Fish formed their own canals or used burrows made by aquatic macro-invertebrates and salamanders. Genetic analyses based on three polymorphic microsatellite loci demonstrate that a total of at least five to 11 sires and dams were the parents of embryos within each of three assayed root-mass nests (of a total of 23 nests found). Males defended the oviposition sites by body-plugging canal entrances after spawning. This and more direct aggressive behaviors by males probably relate to selection pressures imposed by intense competition for fertilization success under these group-spawning conditions.

Copyright: The American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
 Fig. 1.
 Fig. 1.

An adult Pirate Perch (Aphredoderus sayanus) and the peculiar forward position of its urogenital opening. Drawing by Trudy Nicholson


 Fig. 2.
 Fig. 2.

Photographs regarding Pirate Perch spawning: (A) habitat scene showing stream bank and underwater flowing roots; (B) opening to Pirate Perch nest canal in a root mass with a single egg near the entrance; and (C) distribution of Pirate Perch eggs in a dissected root mass, egg diameter 1.5 mm. Color versions of these and other photographs, as well as videotape excerpts of Pirate Perch spawning, can be viewed at website www.genetics.uga.edu/Asayanus/


 Fig. 3.
 Fig. 3.

Schematic composite showing a typical flowing rootmass nesting site with multiple canal entrances and illustrating various behaviors displayed by Pirate Perch in the immediate vicinity (see text). Drawing by Trudy Nicholson


Contributor Notes

(DEF) Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia, Drawer E, Aiken, South Carolina 29802; and (EED, BAP, JCA) Department of Genetics, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602. Present address: (BAP) Department of Biological Sciences, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15282. (DEF)fletcher@srel.edu Send reprint requests to DEF.

Accepted: 16 Oct 2003
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