Know Your Freshwater Fishes
By Mark Everard
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About this ebook
Mark Everard
Mark Everard is Associate Professor of Ecosystem Services at University of the West of England. Mark has extensive experience developing and implementing the sustainable management of ecosystems across five continents, including East and Southern Africa, India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and China.
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Know Your Freshwater Fishes - Mark Everard
Introduction
Often, the eye does not penetrate the surface film of a body of water. This is a shame, as the freshwater flora and fauna of the British Isles is both diverse and spectacular. The freshwater fishes comprise the most charismatic group of organisms living out their lives underwater in Britain, occupying a range of habitats. The fresh waters of the British Isles are diverse, ranging from torrential hill streams to powerful rivers and wide, meandering lowland channels. Canals and drainage channels, varying in size from ditches to the large Fenland drains of eastern England also hold fishes, as do reservoirs, lakes, ponds and other stillwater bodies.
Adaptations and characteristics of freshwater fishes
All of Britain’s freshwater fishes breathe by passing water across gills, swim using fins and lay eggs. However, beyond this common feature, the body form of fishes often betray their preferred habitats and life habits. For example, fishes adapted to stronger flows – such as dace and trout – have streamlined body forms. Others better adapted for more control in sluggish or still waters, such as common bream, tend to have deeper bodies that are also more strongly flattened flank to flank. Fins also betray much of the life habits of fishes. For example, the dorsal (back), anal (rearmost of the fins on the underside) and tail fins of pike are located close together at the rear of the fish, providing it with the propulsive power to accelerate explosively to ambush prey. The pectoral (behind the gills) and ventral (beneath the belly) fins are paired, and are well-developed in fishes like the tench, providing more precise control during slow, gentle swimming as the fishes forage for edible items on the bed of still or slowly flowing waters.
The position, size and other features of the mouth too reveal much about the life habits of the fish. Bleak and rudd, for example, have mouths that are turned upwards, better suiting them to feeding from or near the water’s surface. By contrast, the mouth of barbel, gudgeon and the loaches is angled downwards, equipping them for life on the bed. Other fishes, such as chub and roach, have mouths positioned centrally, enabling them to readily exploit food items across a range of depths. The mouths of predatory fishes, such as pike and zander, are large and armed with teeth to help them hunt fishes and other live prey.
The bodies of most species of British freshwater fishes are covered in scales, bony overlapping plates providing both armour and flexibility. The presence or absence and the number of scales varies between fish families and species, and can be helpful in distinguishing between similar fish species. This is particularly true of the number of scales along the lateral line: a series of sensory pits along the flanks of most groups of fish.
A wide range of books is available for those seeking more detailed information about Britain’s freshwater fishes, including:
• Everard, M. (2013). Britain’s Freshwater Fishes. Princeton University Press/WildGUIDES, Princeton.
• Maitland, P.S. (2004). Keys to the Freshwater Fish of Britain and Ireland, with Notes on their Distribution and Ecology. Freshwater Biological Association Scientific Publication No.62. The Freshwater Biological Association, Ambleside.
British freshwater fish families
The fish fauna of the British Isles comprises not merely a diversity of species – 54 species including a number that are not truly freshwater residents but can be found in estuaries and lower reaches of rivers – but also fishes from 21 different families with quite different characteristics. The fishes in this guide are grouped according to the most common families.
The carp and minnow family (Cyprinidae) is most strongly represented in the British freshwater fish fauna, including 12 native species and seven additional species that have been introduced. The cyprinids have toothless jaws, bodies covered evenly by scales (excepting some scaleless, artificially reared strains), and a single