Esox spp

Alexander, Timothy & Seehausen, Ole, 2021, Diversity, distribution and community composition of fish in perialpine lakes – “ Projet Lac ” synthesis report, Eawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology : 132

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5779569

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5776968

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039187D5-9BAF-BBD6-FFE6-74B4715D8B60

treatment provided by

Donat

scientific name

Esox spp
status

 

Esox spp View in CoL View at ENA (pike)

Two species of pike in the genus Esox are considered native to Switzerland. The northern pike Esox lucius is widespread in cooler fresh and brackish water across the northern hemisphere.The second species Esox cisalpinus was described from lakes south of the Alps in 2011 based on genetic and phenotypic evidence [152, 153]. It was described under two different names by two author teams in the same year, with the name E. cisalpinus considered to have precedence over E. flaviae . The formal description suggested that adult E. lucius exhibit only the round-spotted phenotype, while E. cisalpinus shows mostly diagonal bars or stellate spots, with some fish showing vertical or horizontal bars. The number of scales along the lateral line also seems to distinguish the two species, with E. cisalpinus ranging from 101 – 115 scales and E. lucius generally from 125 – 148 scales [153]. Figure 43 View Figure 43 shows the phenotypic variability of Esox caught in Projet Lac. Indeed, all very large E. lucius (> 60 cm) exhibited the round-spotted pattern. Intermediate-sized adults were more variable, for example the fish from Lake Walen with stripes and spots arranged in diagonal bars. Multiple round-spotted phenotypes, matchingEsox lucius , were also recorded in Projet Lac in some southern lakes (Maggiore and Lugano), corresponding with previous reports of the northern species in these lakes as a result of stocking [153]. Among the DNA-barcoded Esox from the southern lakes, one fish from Lugano was genetically identified as E. lucius (corresponding with its northern phenotype; Figure 43 View Figure 43 ). All other pike from the southern lakes were E. cisalpinus in their mitochondrial sequence (5 from Lugano, 3 from Maggiore, 3 from Garda, 1 from Como, 1 from Mezzola), despite some having the northern, round-spot pattern ( Figure 43 View Figure 43 ). Interbreeding between E. cisalpinus and stocked E. lucius may have caused this disconnection between phenotype and mitochondrial genotype (barcode).

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF