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Common logperch : ウィキペディア英語版 | Common logperch
The common logperch (''Percina caprodes''), sometimes simply known as the logperch, is a fish species in the family Percidae. Like other logperches, it has the typical vertical barring along the flank and a subterminal mouth. This is the most widespread logperch, commonly found in large parts of the eastern USA and Canada. Like other logperches, they inhabit clear, gravelly streams and lakes, reaching a maximum size of about and a maximum age of about 3 years. They play a key role in the reproduction of the snuffbox mussel (''Epioblasma triquetra''). ==Abstract==
The common logperch is a darter species naturally occurring as far north as the St. Lawrence River in Canada, as far west as the Great Lakes, and south throughout the Mississippi River down to the Rio Grande. The common logperch is also found as far west as California, where it was introduced in 1953.〔Cooper,JE.1978. Eggs and Larvae of the Logperch, ''Percina caprodes''. The American Midland Naturalist. 99.2:257-269.〕 Logperch are benthic, nonguarding egglayers, whose embryos drift to lentic areas after hatching. The population distribution of the common logperch may be under increased predatory pressure from stocked saugeyes.〔Denlinger,J, C, S, R, S, Hale, and R A Stein.2006.Seasonal consumptive demand and prey use by stocked saugeyes in Ohio reservois. American Fisheries Society. 135.1:12-27.〕 Dams may also exert stress on the fish, by obstructing migratory pathways and inhibiting gene flow.〔Haponski, A E, T A Marth, and C A Stepien.2007. Genetic divergence across a low-head dam:a preliminary analysisusing logperch and greenside darters. Journal of Great Lakes Research. 33.2:117-126.〕 ''Percina caprodes'' have also been found to be extremely susceptible to nitrite poisoning.〔Lewis, W M, Morris, D P. 1989. Toxicity of Nitrite to Fish: A Review. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 115:183-195.〕 While the common logperch is not currently listed as a threatened or endangered species, humans should be aware of our negative impact on the species, and the ways in which we can minimize this impact; most notably, by limiting the construction of dams, by increasing oxygen levels in the tailwaters of existing dams, by limiting the number of predatory gamefish stocked (such as saugeye), by decreasing the amount of silt and debris deposited in streams, and by monitoring nitrite levels in common logperch habitats. Also, a monitoring plan should be created, in which a routine census is taken of the fish in each area of its distribution, and in which invasive species that outcompete the common logperch, such as ''Neogobius melanostomus'', are removed.〔Bergstrom, M, A, and Mensinger, A, F. 2009. Interspecific resource competition between the invasive round gobe and three native species: logperch, slimy sculpin, and spoonhead sculpin. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 138.5:1009-1017.〕
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