Johnny darter
Etheostoma nigrum Rafinesque, 1820
member of the Perch Family (Percidae)
Blotched Specimens
Artichoke River, St. Louis County, Minnesota 20 August 1997
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What's
In a Name? |
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Where
Do They Live? The Johnny darter is the most common darter in the state. It lives in most of our lakes, streams, and rivers from the Boundary Waters to the southern prairie. Johnny darters are among the first fishes to move into new aquatic habitats or to recolonize a stream after a catastrophe. They prefer clear water with sandy or gravely bottoms and slow or still waters, but they do very well in moderately turbid (cloudy), moving water. They seem to tolerate many kinds of water pollution, more so then other darters species. They often found living with the American brook lamprey, white suckers, bigmouth shiners, central stonerollers, blacknose dace, and other species of darters. |
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How
Big Do They Get? |
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What
Do They Eat? Young Johnny darters eat mostly small copepods and waterfleas. As they grow, they add larger waterfleas, midge larvae, mayfly larvae, caddisfly larvae and sometimes sideswimmers to their diet. |
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What
Eats Them? |
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How
Do They Reproduce? |
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Conservation
and Management |
Permission is granted for the non-commercial educational or scientific use of the text and images on this Web document. Please credit the author or authors listed below.
Photographs by Konrad P. Schmidt
Text by Nicole Paulson & Jay T. Hatch in
cooperation with
the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources' MinnAqua Aquatic Program
This page developed with funds from the
MinnAqua Program
(Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, Division of Fisheries)
and the
Sport Fish Restoration
Program (Fish and Wildlife Service, US Department of the Interior)
Maintained by Jay T. Hatch
General College and James
Ford Bell Museum of Natural History
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis/St.
Paul
Last updated 23 October 2002