SUCKERS

 Quillback  Highfin Carpsucker  Lake Chubsucker  Sharpfin Chubsucker
 Spotted Sucker  River Redhorse  Blacktail Redhorse  Grayfin Redhorse

FOR THE "SUCKER FISHING REGULATIONS" BROCHURE CLICK HERE.

quillback, Duane RaverQUILLBACK

Carpiodes cyprinus

Florida Range: The quillback inhabits the larger rivers of the Panhandle, from the Escambia River eastward to the Apalachicola River system.

Overall distribution: This sucker ranges widely over much of the eastern United States and southern Canada.

Identification: Eight species of suckers occur in Florida, including two species of Carpiodes carpsuckers, the quillback and the highfin carpsucker. As their common name implies, these silvery, deep-bodied fish resemble common carp. However, both carpsuckers may be distinguished from carp by the absence of barbels, and lack of spines in dorsal and anal fins of the carpsuckers. In both carpsuckers, the mouth is situated on the underside of the head and the snout extends forward beyond the jaws; also, the first ray of the dorsal fin may be very long, forming an elevated filament. Quillback and highfin carpsuckers are very similar in appearance, but they may be separated by looking at the lower lip. The quillback does not have a nipple-like knob at the middle of the lower lip, while the highfin carpsucker has a small nipple at this location. Both carpsuckers may be distinguished from other Florida suckers by body shape. The carpsuckers have deep, slab-sided bodies, while our other suckers are more elongate or somewhat cylindrical in shape.

Life History and Ecology: Quillbacks are benthic fish, feeding on the bottom and ingesting insect larvae, other organisms and organic detritus. They reproduce during March and April. Females may produce from 15,000 to 360,000 eggs apiece, which are broadcast over gravel shoals or deep stretches of sand. They may live as long as ten or eleven years, and may reach a maximum length of about 26 inches and maximum weight of 12 pounds.

Quillbacks typically inhabit moderately large streams, but may also live in creeks if permanent pools are present. Characteristically they reach greatest numbers in biologically productive large streams with permanent pools and gravel bottoms. However, in Florida they are restricted to the larger rivers and generally do not enter the smaller tributary streams.

Status: Although not as abundant as the highfin carpsucker, the quillback is a frequently collected fish of the Escambia, Choctawhatchee and Apalachicola rivers. In these rivers the species seems to be in no danger of population decline.

Fishery: The carpsuckers are commercial fishes in some areas of the central United States. They are good to eat, but are bony. Suckers can be taken by snagging, netting and gigging where these methods are legal. Small suckers are important food items for game fishes.


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highfin carpsucker, Gray Bass photoHIGHFIN CARPSUCKER

Carpiodes velifer

Florida Range: Highfin carpsuckers inhabit the Escambia, Yellow and Choctawhatchee rivers of northwestern Florida.

Overall distribution: Along the Gulf Coast, these suckers range from Louisiana eastward to the Choctawhatchee River of Florida. In the west, it ranges northward from Louisiana to the Texas-Oklahoma border and north to Minnesota and Wisconsin. In the east it ranges from Florida, northward to North Carolina and Ohio.

Identification: Along with its cousin, the quillback, the highfin carpsucker superficially resembles the common carp. However, both carpsuckers may easily be separated from carp by the absence of barbels and lack of spines in dorsal and anal fins of the two carpsuckers. Both carpsuckers have the mouth positioned on the underside of the head and the snout extends forward beyond the jaws. In addition, the first ray of the dorsal fin may be very long, forming an elevated filament. Quillback and highfin carpsuckers are quite alike in appearance, but may be separated by looking at the lower lip. The highfin carpsucker bears a small, nipple-like structure, or knob, at the middle of the lower lip, while the quillback lacks this nipple. Both carpsuckers may be distinguished from other Florida suckers by body shape. Carpsuckers are deep-bodied and compressed from side-to-side, while other Florida suckers are more elongate or somewhat cylindrical. General body color is silvery or brassy on the sides, with the upper surfaces somewhat darker and the lower body white or yellowish.

Life History and Ecology: Although it is known to be a bottom-feeder, little else is known regarding the food habits of this species. In Alabama highfin carpsuckers have been observed in breeding condition during April through June. Spawning occurs over deep gravel riffles or runs. In Ohio, females produced from 41,600 to 62,300 eggs apiece. Highfin carpsuckers may live as long as eight years and reach a maximum size of about 20 inches and three pounds.

In Florida highfin carpsuckers are restricted to moderate-to-large sized rivers and do not enter the smaller tributary creeks, but in other areas they may do so. They prefer clean waters and apparently are intolerant of siltation and turbidity.

Status: The highfin carpsucker is common in the Escambia and Choctawhatchee rivers and appears to face no obvious threats to its existence. However, it does appear to be susceptible to siltation and other forms of environmental degradation.

Fishery: Although carpsuckers are bony, they are good to eat, and in the central United States have been harvested as commercial fishes. Small suckers are ecologically valuable as food for game fish. Suckers may be taken by snagging, netting or gigging where these methods are legal.

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Lake chubsucker; Gray Bass photoLAKE CHUBSUCKER

Erimyzon sucetta

Florida Range: Statewide

Overall distribution: Two major distribution patterns exist, the first following the Gulf and Atlantic coasts from eastern Texas, eastward to southeastern Virginia. The second path extends northward, up the Mississippi River system from Louisiana to Wisconsin, Michigan and extreme southeastern Canada.

Identification: The lake chubsucker and its close relative, the sharpfin chubsucker, are chubby, heavy-bodied fish, but although they are somewhat compressed from side-to-side, they are not nearly so slab-sided as the carpsuckers and also lack the long, elevated dorsal fins of the latter. The remaining Florida suckers, the spotted sucker, and the three redhorses, have much more elongate and streamlined body shapes than the chubsuckers. In addition, while the mouth of the chubsuckers is located somewhat beneath the head, the mouth of the spotted sucker and the redhorse suckers is definitely positioned beneath the head in a down-turned fashion. Adult males have a bilobed (two-lobed) anal fin. In Florida, this species can only be confused with the sharpfin chubsucker, with which it occasionally occurs in the western Panhandle. As its name suggests, the sharpfin chubsucker has a much more pointed dorsal fin than does the lake chubsucker, the dorsal fin of which is somewhat rounded in profile. General body coloration of lake chubsuckers is dark bronze, brown or olive on the upper surfaces and lighter bronze over the sides, with the undersides whitish.

Life History and Ecology: Lake chubsuckers are omnivores, feeding upon both plants and animals. Feeding on the bottom, they take aquatic insects, fish eggs, crustaceans, algae and other plants. In most areas, including Florida, the peak spawning season is in the spring and early summer. In Florida, reproduction may take place over a long period of time; depending upon the geographic area, spawning may occur from December through October. About 2,000 to 20,000 eggs are produced by each female. Lake chubsuckers may attain an age of eight years and a maximum size of about 18 inches in length. In Lake Panasoffkee, some individuals reached a length of 15.5 inches and a weight of 2.2 pounds.

While most species of suckers prefer to live in flowing streams, lake chubsuckers prefer quiet or sluggishly flowing waters, usually being most abundant where the bottom is soft, with much organic debris, and in areas of dense aquatic vegetation. Lake chubsuckers have been recorded from a wide variety of habitats, including lakes, ponds, impoundments, oxbows, backwaters, floodplains, sloughs, bayous, roadside ditches, springs, millponds, rivers, creeks, canals, wet prairies, borrow pits, quarry pits and swamps.

Status: Lake chubsuckers are common in Florida and face no obvious threats to their existence. However, in other areas of the United States they have become less numerous in areas where excessive siltation has occurred.

Fishery: In some areas of the county this species is taken with nets, or by snagging or gigging during spring spawning runs, and they may sometimes be caught on small flies or live bait. Like most other suckers, they are good to eat but are bony. Suckers may be prepared by frying, broiling or baking. They serve a valuable ecological role as food for game fish such as largemouth bass.

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Sharpfin chubsucker, Gray Bass photoSHARPFIN CHUBSUCKER

Erimyzon tenuis

Florida Range: Sharpfin chubsuckers inhabit streams of the western Panhandle, from the Perdido River to the Yellow River.

Overall distribution: Southeastern Louisiana, and eastward in Coastal Plain streams to the Choctawhatchee River drainage of Alabama.

Identification: The sharpfin chubsucker is superficially similar to the lake chubsucker, with which it is occasionally found. As the common name implies, the dorsal fin is sharply pointed, while that of the lake chubsucker is rounded in profile. Usually the first ray of the dorsal fin is longer than the base of this fin, while the first ray is usually shorter than the fin base of the lake chubsucker. Both of these chubsuckers are robust, oblong and somewhat compressed fishes; however, they are not nearly as deep-bodied or slab-sided as the carpsuckers and they have shorter dorsal fins (containing less than 20 rays) than the carpsuckers. Conversely, most other Florida suckers (spotted sucker and several redhorse suckers) are much more elongate and slenderer than the chubsuckers, and although the mouth of the chubsuckers is slightly below the head, it is not nearly as far beneath the head as that of the spotted sucker and the redhorse suckers. The anal fin of the male sharpfin sucker is not bilobed as is that of the male lake chubsucker.

Life History and Ecology: Little is known about the life style of this sucker. Breeding takes place in the spring, probably March and April. They may reach a length of 16 inches and may live seven or eight years. This is a fish of streams rather than quiet waters; however, it does not prefer the swifter waters favored by most suckers.

Sharpfin chubsuckers are typically found in pools and backwaters of creeks and rivers, especially where current flow is reduced and soft substrates occur with aquatic vegetation. They are rarely found in the larger rivers, where they would have to compete with the better adapted redhorses, spotted sucker and carpsuckers.

Status: Sharpfin chubsuckers are common in appropriate habitats in Florida and face no obvious threat to their existence.

Fishery: As with most other suckers, this species is good to eat, but bony. Where legal, they may be taken by netting, gigging or snagging. The young undoubtedly provide forage for predatory fishes, such as chain pickerel, redfin pickerel, and largemouth bass.

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spotted sucker, Duane RaverSPOTTED SUCKER

Minytrema melanops

Florida Range: Spotted suckers occupy streams of northern Florida, from the Perdido River, eastward to the Suwannee River system.

Overall distribution: Spotted suckers are widely distributed throughout the central, and southeastern United States and reach southern Canada.

Identification: This species and the redhorse suckers (genus Moxostoma) may be readily separated from other Florida suckers (the carpsuckers, Carpiodes, and chubsuckers, Erimyzon) by their elongate, cylindrical bodies and distinctly sucker-like mouths located well on the underside of the head. Spotted suckers and the redhorse suckers have protrusible lips which they employ to pick up food from the bottom and it is these extendable lips which provide them with the amusing local name of buglemouth bass. Spotted suckers may be identified by the presence of eight to twelve parallel rows of dark spots which run along the sides of the body. Overall body coloration is brassy or bronze, with the upper back shading to olive or brownish and the bottom being gray or white. Breeding males may have two dark bands running along the sides, separated by a pinkish or reddish band along the midline of the sides.

Life History and Ecology: Spotted suckers are bottom-feeders, sucking up food items with their protrusible lips. They consume copepods, cladocera, true midge larvae, aquatic earthworms, biting midge larvae, water mites, aquatic beetles, mayfly nymphs, dragonflies, stoneflies, caddisflies, and rarely, fish. Spawning migrations begin during January, and reproduction occurs through the spring. They may live about five or six years and reach a maximum length of about 24 inches and maximum weight of three pounds.

In Florida, spotted suckers are strictly river fishes, occurring in moderate-sized creeks and large rivers. They may also be abundant in river-associated habitats such as oxbow lakes, riverine swamps and backwaters.

Status: Spotted suckers are common in appropriate habitats in Florida and face no immediate threats to their existence. However, they are known to be intolerant of excess siltation and pollution. If the rivers of northern Florida receive increasing amounts of soil erosion, urban runoff or pollutants, this species may undergo dramatic population reductions. The presence of viable populations in our streams may be considered an indicator of good water quality.

Fishery: Like most suckers, spotted suckers are very good, albeit bony, food fishes. Joshua Laerm, in his book, Fishes of the Okefenokee Swamp, said this is one of the best fish for preparing by braising and suggested cooking it slowly in white wine with carrots and onions. Although very rarely taken by hook-and-line, they can be netted, snagged or gigged where these methods are legal. Persons interested in taking suckers should carefully check the rules of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

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River Redhorse, Duane RaverRIVER REDHORSE

Moxostoma carinatum

Florida Range: In Florida the river redhorse is known only from the Escambia River at the western end of the Panhandle.

Overall distribution: In Gulf Coast rivers this species ranges eastward from southeastern Louisiana to northwestern Florida. From this region it ranges northward to Minnesota, Michigan, Pennsylvania and southeastern Canada.

Identification: This robust, cylindrical sucker may be separated from other similar Florida suckers by its red tail fin. The dorsal and other fins may also be red or reddish. The dorsal fin has a straight or slightly concave margin and the tail fin has a pointed upper lobe which usually is slightly longer than the rounded lower lobe. Crescent-shaped dark spots may be visible on the scales of the back and sides. Overall body color is olive to brownish across the back, with silvery or bronze sides and a white underside.

Life History and Ecology: River redhorse feed primarily on molluscs such as mussels and clams, and their enlarged, molar-shaped, internal pharyngeal teeth are specially adapted for crushing the hard shells of such bivalves. In Alabama they fed heavily upon the introduced Asiatic clam Corbicula, and also upon aquatic insects such as mayflies, midges and caddisflies. Also in Alabama, spawning occurred in April, females producing about 6,000 to 23,000 eggs apiece. Construction of a nest prior to the spawning event is a characteristic behavior of many kinds of fish, such as some of the minnows and sunfishes. However, the river redhorse is the only species of sucker which constructs a nest. Males make nests on gravel shoals by using the head, mouth and tail to dig a depression four to eight feet in diameter. After the nest is completed the male positions himself over the nest, facing upstream. When a female approaches, the male preforms a courtship display by rapidly swimming to-and-fro across the nest. Curiously, another male then joins the original male in this dance. Then the female is positioned between the males and the males press closely against her. When the trio are together, the eggs and milt are released, and the fertilized eggs are buried in the gravel. River redhorse may live as long as twelve years and reach a length of 30 inches and a weight of 13.5 pounds.

Normally inhabitants of medium to large size rivers, they may also enter tributary streams and have been observed in reservoirs. They prefer clean rivers with sand, gravel or cobblestone bottoms and swift currents.

Status: Within Florida, it is very rare, and intensive recent sampling of the Escambia River has failed to locate this species, thus it may not now occur in our state. However, it has been collected in the Alabama portion of the river. Generally speaking, river redhorse are usually uncommon or rare throughout much of their geographic range, although they may still be abundant in some rivers outside. They have disappeared from some areas and have been much reduced in numbers in others. Impoundment, pollution and siltation have been factors in its decline. River redhorse are specialized for feeding on molluscs, and the reduction of mussel populations in large river systems may have adversely affected them. Molluscs, except the Asiatic clam (Corbicula), are uncommon in the Florida portion of the Conecuh-Escambia River system, and this lack of native molluscs may diminish the attractiveness of this river to this fish.

Fishery: Where they maintain abundant populations (in other states) they are popular sport fish. Typically they are pursued by anglers during the breeding season when the suckers are concentrated. Techniques used to capture them include snaring with wire hoops, snagging with treble hooks, gigging, spearing, netting, and bow hunting. River redhorse are very edible, although like most suckers, they are bony.

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Blacktail redhorse, Gray Bass photoBLACKTAIL REDHORSE

Moxostoma poecilurum

Florida Range: All major river systems in the western Panhandle, from the Perdido River, eastward to the Choctawhatchee River system.

Overall distribution: Eastern Texas, eastward to the Choctawhatchee River of Florida. Ranges northward from the Gulf Coast to Arkansas, Tennessee and northwestern Georgia.

Identification: The blacktail redhorse may be readily separated from all other Florida suckers by the color pattern of the tail fin. The lower lobe of the tail fin is bordered lengthwise by a white band. Above this white edge is a parallel black band which extends from the base of the tail to the rear edge of the fin. Otherwise, this elongate, cylindrical, moderately compressed sucker superficially resembles the spotted sucker, river redhorse and greyfin redhorse. General body coloration is bronze to brownish over the back, with silvery sides and a white bottom. Color of all fins, except the tail, varies from reddish to white.

Life History and Ecology: Details of biology and ecology apparently have not been thoroughly investigated. Spawning takes place in shoal areas of small streams from March to May. Two or three males may spawn with one female. They may reach 20 inches in length and weigh 3.1 pounds.

Blacktail redhorse inhabit both large rivers and their tributary streams and may sometimes be found in reservoirs. Bottom types in typical streams may vary from soft sand or silt to gravel and rock.

Status: Blacktail redhorse are abundant in moderate-size streams and large rivers of northwestern Florida and apparently face no immediate threats to their continued existence.

Fishery: Where legal, sport fishing for suckers with gigs or nets is popular and blacktail redhorse are an important component of this fishery. However, you should check the rules of the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission before using these methods in your area.

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Grayfin redhorse; Gray Bass photoGRAYFIN REDHORSE

Moxostoma (undescribed species)

Florida Range: Apalachicola River system, including the Chipola River.

Overall distribution: The grayfin redhorse is restricted to the Apalachicola River drainage of Florida, Georgia and Alabama.

Identification: As its name implies, this sucker has plain dusky or gray fins. Florida’s other Moxostoma suckers, the blacktail redhorse and river redhorse, have distinctively colored fins. The lower portion of the tail fin is black and white in the blacktail redhorse, and the tail fin is red in the river redhorse. In addition, neither of these two suckers occur together with the grayfin redhorse. The grayfin redhorse does somewhat resemble the spotted sucker, with which it does co-occur. However, the spotted sucker is readily identified by the numerous black spots along its sides.

Life History and Ecology: Most of our knowledge of the life history of the grayfin redhorse has come from investigations conducted in Georgia, where food items included various aquatic insects such as caddisflies and mayflies, and also molluscs. In addition, a substantial amount of organic detritus was also eaten. Reproduction occurred from March to May, and females produced an average of 13,000 eggs apiece. They may live to six years of age, and may reach 20.5 inches in length and weigh three pounds.

Throughout its limited range it inhabits a wide variety of stream types, ranging from small streams to large rivers. Although it has been collected from reservoirs, it rarely inhabits standing waters, and the impoundment of many sections of rivers within the Apalachicola River system has been a cause of its decline in some areas. It has been found in both clear and turbid waters, in sluggish to moderate velocity currents, and over sand, silt, gravel, rock rubble and bedrock.

Status: Although its abundance has been reduced elsewhere, primarily by impoundments, it is in no immediate danger of extinction in Florida. Preservation of high quality habitat, such as the Chipola River, will be the key to maintaining viable populations in Florida.

Fishery: Suckers are good food fish, and may be harvested by gigging, nets, or portable impoundments where legal. Before attempting to use these methods, you should carefully check the current fishing regulations of the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, as much of the range of this species in Florida (Chipola River) is closed to these techniques.

FOR THE "SUCKER FISHING REGULATIONS" BROCHURE CLICK HERE.

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