Coregonus pidschian (Gmelin, 1789)

Love, Milton S., Bizzarro, Joseph J., Cornthwaite, Maria, Frable, Benjamin W. & Maslenikov, Katherine P., 2021, Checklist of marine and estuarine fishes from the Alaska-Yukon Border, Beaufort Sea, to Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, Zootaxa 5053 (1), pp. 1-285 : 53

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5053.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:295D03A4-589A-4E3F-B030-5121EF7D7398

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5822008

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BE87D6-FFA5-FF81-98EA-FEB9FF013267

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Coregonus pidschian (Gmelin, 1789)
status

 

Coregonus pidschian (Gmelin, 1789) View in CoL .

Humpback Whitefish. To 54 cm (31.5 in) TL. Along Arctic coasts from Siberia, Russia, west to Kara Sea, and eastward along Alaska and Canadian coasts to Hudson Bay and New England (as Clupea clupeaformis of Canadian authors). American biologists have generally referred to anadromous and Alaska-dwelling individuals of this species as “humpback” whitefish, Coregonus pidschian . Anadromous fish in northern Canada usually have been called “lake” whitefish ( Coregonus clupeaformis (Mitchill, 1818)) by Canadian researchers. Following McDermid et al. (2007), we refer to the individuals residing from the Alaska Peninsula to the U.S. Chukchi and Beaufort Sea drainages and eastward at least to the lower Mackenzie River as this species. All in Love et al. (2016).

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