Difference between revisions of "Catfish" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
(→‎Catfish as food: added info)
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== Physical characteristics ==
 
== Physical characteristics ==
Catfish have scaleless skins, fleshy, rayless posterior fins, and sharp defensive spines in the shoulder and dorsal fins. They are able to use the swim bladder to produce sounds. Catfish are usually dull-colored, though the madtoms of Eastern North American streams are brightly patterned. Most species, such as the stone and tadpole catfishes and the madtom, can inflict stings by means of poison glands in the pectoral spines (this discludes members of [[Malapteruridae]] (electric catfish). They possess a strong, hollow, bonified leading ray on their dorsal  and pectoral fins, through which a stinging [[protein]] can be delivered if the fish is irritated <ref name=fin> {{cite web| url = http://www.fcps.k12.va.us/StratfordLandingES/Ecology/mpages/channel_catfish.htm|title=Channel Catfish |accessdate=2006-12-02|publisher=Fairfax County Public Schools}}</ref>. In members of the family [[Plotosidae]], and of the genus ''[[Heteropneustes]]'', this protein is so strong it may hospitalize humans unfortunate enough to receive a sting. In many catfish, these fins may be held open and locked in place.
 
  
The catfish is related to the sucker and the minnow, and like them has a complex set of bones forming a sensitive hearing apparatus. Catfish are named for the barbels (“whiskers”) around their mouths, four on the lower jaw and one each on the outer and upperjaw. Some catfish have a well developed sense of taste.  External taste buds abound on barbels of the adult catfish Corydoras arcuatus.  organshttp://www.factmonster.com/ce6/sci/A0810852.html  
+
Catfish have scaleless skins, fleshy, rayless posterior fins, and sharp defensive spines in the shoulder and dorsal fins. Some species are able to use the swim bladder to produce sounds. Catfish are usually dull-colored, though the madtoms of Eastern North American streams are brightly patterned. Most species, such as the stone and tadpole catfishes and the madtom, can inflict stings by means of poison glands in the pectoral spines (this discludes members of [[Malapteruridae]] (electric catfish). They possess a strong, hollow, bonified leading ray on their dorsal  and pectoral fins, through which a stinging [[protein]] can be delivered if the fish is irritated <ref name=fin> {{cite web| url = http://www.fcps.k12.va.us/StratfordLandingES/Ecology/mpages/channel_catfish.htm|title=Channel Catfish |accessdate=2006-12-02|publisher=Fairfax County Public Schools}}</ref>. In members of the family [[Plotosidae]], and of the genus ''[[Heteropneustes]]'', this protein is so strong it may hospitalize humans unfortunate enough to receive a sting. In many catfish, these fins may be held open and locked in place.
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Siluriformes are clearly monophyletic as indicated by several complex anatomical synapomorphies including modification of the upper jaw to support and move a pair of sensory barbels.http://tolweb.org/Siluriformes
 +
The catfish is related to the sucker and the minnow, and like them has a complex set of bones forming a sensitive hearing apparatus. Catfish are named for the barbels (“whiskers”) around their mouths. Some common species of the catfish including the channel catfish have four of these "whiskers"  on the lower jaw and one each on the outer and upperjaw. Some catfish have a well developed sense of taste.  External taste buds abound on barbels of the adult catfish Corydoras arcuatus.  organshttp://www.factmonster.com/ce6/sci/A0810852.html  
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== Spawning habits ==
 
== Spawning habits ==
Most species of catfish in the wild spawn once a year and  sexual maturity is usually reached from three to five years. In farms 2 years is the average age for maturity. Although the female and male usually only spawn once a year when water temperatures are favorable in spring or early summer, a male in capitivy can spawn several times.  The channel catfish male builts the "nest" in mud banks along rivers, streams, lakes or ponds. He also protects the unhatched eggs and young which amount in number from 3,000 to 4000 eggs per pound of the females body weight. This male dominance in finding a nest and protecting the young occurs in many of the catfish species. After the eggs are layed they hatch within 5 to 10 days.  Once the eggs hatch, the fryes (young fish) have a yolk like sac that nourshes them for 2-5 days until it desolves and they are fully developed. They then swim up and gulp in air, which fills their swimming bladder and helps regulate their buoyancy.http://www.floridaconservation.org/fishing/Fishes/catfish.html
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 +
Many species of catfish in the wild, spawn once a year and  sexual maturity is usually reached from three to five years. In farms the average time for maturity decreases. Although the female and male usually only spawn once a year when water temperatures are favorable in spring or early summer, a male in capitivy can spawn several times.  The channel catfish male builds the "nest" in mud banks along rivers, streams, lakes or ponds. He also protects the unhatched eggs and young which amount in number from 3,000 to 4000 eggs per pound of the females body weight. The flathead catfish can lay up to 100,000 eggs during one spawning cycle. This male dominance in finding a nest and protecting the young are common in many of the catfish species. After the eggs are layed, they hatch within 5 to 10 days.  Once the eggs hatch, the fryes (young fish) have a yolk-like sac that nourshes them for 2-5 days until it disolves and they are fully developed. They then swim-up and gulp in air, which fills their swimming bladder and helps regulate their buoyancy.http://www.floridaconservation.org/fishing/Fishes/catfish.html
  
 
== Taxonomy ==  
 
== Taxonomy ==  
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Catfish, which have a sweet, mild flesh, are important as food fish throughout the world. [[Ictaluridae|Ictalurids]] are cultivated in [[North America]] (especially in the Deep South, with Mississippi being the largest domestic catfish producer).<ref>{{Cite paper | author= J.E. Morris| title= Pond Culture of Channel Catfish in the North Central Region | publisher= North Central Regional Aquaculture Center| date= October 1993| url= http://www.extension.iastate.edu/Publications/NCR444.pdf| accessdate= 2006-06-28}}  
 
Catfish, which have a sweet, mild flesh, are important as food fish throughout the world. [[Ictaluridae|Ictalurids]] are cultivated in [[North America]] (especially in the Deep South, with Mississippi being the largest domestic catfish producer).<ref>{{Cite paper | author= J.E. Morris| title= Pond Culture of Channel Catfish in the North Central Region | publisher= North Central Regional Aquaculture Center| date= October 1993| url= http://www.extension.iastate.edu/Publications/NCR444.pdf| accessdate= 2006-06-28}}  
</ref> In the southeastern United States, catfish are an extremely popular food.  The fish, mostly [[channel catfish]] and [[blue catfish]], are found in most waterways in the region.  The fish is typically breaded with cornmeal and fried.  Catfish are easy to farm in warm climates, leading to inexpensive and safe food in local grocers. This has further increased its popularity in the U.S. as food. Among the catfishes found in Florida, the white is second only to the channel catfish in popularity.  Since they can also be taken by commercial fishermen they are the leading aquaculture industry in the United States. Commercial catfish production generates over 46 percent of the value of aquaculture production in the United States. From the first commercial production in ponds in the 1960s, catfish production has grown rapidly to reach annual sales of 660 million pounds in 2003. The value of the catfish crop in the United States reached $425 million in 2003. Mississippi, in accord with its acreage, reported the greatest value (approximately $243 million in 2003).
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</ref> In the southeastern United States, catfish are an extremely popular food.  The fish, mostly [[channel catfish]] and [[blue catfish]], are found in most waterways in the region.  The fish is typically breaded with cornmeal and fried.  Catfish are easy to farm in warm climates, leading to inexpensive and safe food in local grocers, harvesting young catfish  around 18 months. This has further increased its popularity in the U.S. as food. Among the catfishes found in Florida, the white is second only to the channel catfish in popularity.  Since they can also be taken by commercial fishermen they are the leading aquaculture industry in the United States. Commercial catfish production generates over 46 percent of the value of aquaculture production in the United States. From the first commercial production in ponds in the 1960s, catfish production has grown rapidly to reach annual sales of 660 million pounds in 2003. The value of the catfish crop in the United States reached $425 million in 2003. Mississippi, in accord with its acreage, reported the greatest value (approximately $243 million in 2003).
 
  program.<refhttp://msucares.com/aquaculture/catfish/January 3, 2007ref/>                             
 
  program.<refhttp://msucares.com/aquaculture/catfish/January 3, 2007ref/>                             
  

Revision as of 05:59, 4 January 2007

Catfish
Channel catfish.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Siluriformes
Families

Akysidae
Amblycipitidae
Amphiliidae
Ariidae
Aspredinidae
Astroblepidae
Auchenipteridae
Bagridae
Callichthyidae
Cetopsidae
Chacidae
Clariidae
Claroteidae
Cranoglanididae
Diplomystidae
Doradidae
Hypophthalmidae
Ictaluridae
Lacantuniidae
Loricariidae
Malapteruridae
Mochokidae
Nematogenyidae
Pangasiidae
Parakysidae
Pimelodidae
Plotosidae
Schilbeidae
Scoloplacidae
Siluridae
Sisoridae
Trichomycteridae

Catfish (order Siluriformes) are a diverse group of fish. Named for their prominent barbels, which give the image of cat-like whiskers, they are found primarily in freshwater environments of all kinds, with species on every continent except Antarctica. Some species from the families Ariidae and Plotosidae are also found in marine environments. They feature some of the smallest known vertebrates, including the candiru, the only vertebrate parasite to attack humans, as well as Mekong giant catfish, the largest reported freshwater fish. There are armour-plated types and also naked types, but they do not have scales. Not all catfish families have prominent barbels; what defines a fish as being in the order Siluriformes are certain features of the skull and swimbladder.

Physical characteristics

Catfish have scaleless skins, fleshy, rayless posterior fins, and sharp defensive spines in the shoulder and dorsal fins. Some species are able to use the swim bladder to produce sounds. Catfish are usually dull-colored, though the madtoms of Eastern North American streams are brightly patterned. Most species, such as the stone and tadpole catfishes and the madtom, can inflict stings by means of poison glands in the pectoral spines (this discludes members of Malapteruridae (electric catfish). They possess a strong, hollow, bonified leading ray on their dorsal and pectoral fins, through which a stinging protein can be delivered if the fish is irritated [1]. In members of the family Plotosidae, and of the genus Heteropneustes, this protein is so strong it may hospitalize humans unfortunate enough to receive a sting. In many catfish, these fins may be held open and locked in place. Siluriformes are clearly monophyletic as indicated by several complex anatomical synapomorphies including modification of the upper jaw to support and move a pair of sensory barbels.http://tolweb.org/Siluriformes The catfish is related to the sucker and the minnow, and like them has a complex set of bones forming a sensitive hearing apparatus. Catfish are named for the barbels (“whiskers”) around their mouths. Some common species of the catfish including the channel catfish have four of these "whiskers" on the lower jaw and one each on the outer and upperjaw. Some catfish have a well developed sense of taste. External taste buds abound on barbels of the adult catfish Corydoras arcuatus. organshttp://www.factmonster.com/ce6/sci/A0810852.html


Size

Head of the red-tailed catfish, Phractocephalus hemioliopterus, from the Amazon. This species is often offered for sale when juvenile to aquarists who little suspect it can attain 120 cm.

Catfish range in size and behavior from the heaviest, the Mekong giant catfish in Southeast Asia and the longest, the wels catfish of Eurasia, to detritivores (species that eat dead material on the bottom), and even to a tiny parasitic species commonly called the candiru, Vandellia cirrhosa. Members of most madtom species are no more than 5 in. (12.7 cm) long; some are less than 2 in. (5 cm) long. Danube catfish Silurus glanis called wels, or sheatfish, reach a length of 13 ft (4 m) and a weight of 400 lb (180 kg) and are the only native catfish species known of Europe, besides the much smaller related Aristotle catfish found in Greece. Mythology and literature record wels catfish of astounding proportions, yet to be scientifically proved. The average size of the species is about 1.2 m to 1.6 m, and fish more than 2 m are very rare. The largest specimens on record measure more than 2.5 m in length and sometimes exeeded 100 kg. The wels catfish was introduced to Britain, Italy, Spain, Greece and some other countries during the last century. The species has flourished in the warm lakes and rivers of Southern Europe. The River Danube, River Po in Italy and the River Ebro in Spain are famous for huge wels catfish, which grow up to 2 m. These habitats contain plenty of food and lack natural predators. A very large wels catfish was caught by Kevin Maddocks on August 6, 1999, recorded at 91.62 kg (202 lb). Tim Pruitt of Illinois caught the largest blue catfish, Ictalurus furcatus, in the Mississippi River on May 22, 2005 that weighed 56.25 kg (124 lb). The largest flathead catfish, Pylodictis olivaris, ever caught was in Independence, Kansas, weighing 56 kg (123 lb 9 oz). However, these records pale in comparison to a giant Mekong catfish caught in northern Thailand in May 1, 2005 and reported to the press almost 2 months later, that weighed 293 kg (646 lb). This is the largest giant Mekong catfish caught, but only since Thai officials started keeping records in 1981 [2]. The giant Mekong catfish are not well studied since they live in developing countries and it is quite possible that they can grow even larger.

Spawning habits

Many species of catfish in the wild, spawn once a year and sexual maturity is usually reached from three to five years. In farms the average time for maturity decreases. Although the female and male usually only spawn once a year when water temperatures are favorable in spring or early summer, a male in capitivy can spawn several times. The channel catfish male builds the "nest" in mud banks along rivers, streams, lakes or ponds. He also protects the unhatched eggs and young which amount in number from 3,000 to 4000 eggs per pound of the females body weight. The flathead catfish can lay up to 100,000 eggs during one spawning cycle. This male dominance in finding a nest and protecting the young are common in many of the catfish species. After the eggs are layed, they hatch within 5 to 10 days. Once the eggs hatch, the fryes (young fish) have a yolk-like sac that nourshes them for 2-5 days until it disolves and they are fully developed. They then swim-up and gulp in air, which fills their swimming bladder and helps regulate their buoyancy.http://www.floridaconservation.org/fishing/Fishes/catfish.html

Taxonomy

Catfish belong to the phylum Chordata, subphylum Vertebrata, class Actinopterygii, order Siluriformes , and suborder Mematognathi.http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/classification/Clariidae.html Catfish also belong to a superorder called the Ostariophysi, which also includes the Cypriniformes, Characiformes, Gonorynchiformes and Gymnotiformes (although some place Gymnotiformes as a sub-order of Siluriformes). As of 2005 there are 37 catfish families, and around 2,000 species have been described, although this number is in constant flux due to taxonomic work on the order.

In June, 2005, researchers named the 37th family of catfish, Lacantuniidae, only the third new family of fish distinguished in the last 70 years (others being the coelacanth in 1938 and the megamouth shark in 1983). The new species in Lacantuniidae, Lacantunia enigmatica, was found in the Lacantun river Chiapas, Mexico.

Catfish as food

Market-size USDA 103 catfish ready for harvest. This new variety grows faster than other catfish.

Catfish, which have a sweet, mild flesh, are important as food fish throughout the world. Ictalurids are cultivated in North America (especially in the Deep South, with Mississippi being the largest domestic catfish producer).[3] In the southeastern United States, catfish are an extremely popular food. The fish, mostly channel catfish and blue catfish, are found in most waterways in the region. The fish is typically breaded with cornmeal and fried. Catfish are easy to farm in warm climates, leading to inexpensive and safe food in local grocers, harvesting young catfish around 18 months. This has further increased its popularity in the U.S. as food. Among the catfishes found in Florida, the white is second only to the channel catfish in popularity. Since they can also be taken by commercial fishermen they are the leading aquaculture industry in the United States. Commercial catfish production generates over 46 percent of the value of aquaculture production in the United States. From the first commercial production in ponds in the 1960s, catfish production has grown rapidly to reach annual sales of 660 million pounds in 2003. The value of the catfish crop in the United States reached $425 million in 2003. Mississippi, in accord with its acreage, reported the greatest value (approximately $243 million in 2003).

program.<refhttp://msucares.com/aquaculture/catfish/January 3, 2007ref/>                             

In Asia, many catfish species are important food fish. Several walking catfish (Clariidae) and shark catfish (Pangasiidae) species are heavily cultured in Africa and Asia. Exports of one particular shark catfish species from Vietnam, Pangasius bocourti, has met with pressures from the U.S. catfish industry. In 2003, The U.S. Congress passed a law preventing the imported fish from being labeled as catfish.[4] As a result, the Vietnamese exporters of this fish now label their products sold in the U.S. as "basa fish."

Catfish as aquarium fish

There is a large and growing ornamental fish trade, with hundreds of species of catfish, especially the genus Corydoras, being a popular component of many aquariums. These are commonly known as cory's. Other catfish commonly found in the aquarium trade are armored suckermouth catfish, banjo catfish, talking catfish, and long-whiskered catfish.

Catfish as invasive species

Walking catfish is an invasive species in Florida.

Representatives of the genus Ictalurus have been misguidedly introduced into European waters in the hope of obtaining a sporting and a food resource. However, the European stock of American catfishes has not achieved the dimensions of these fishes in their native waters, and have only increased the ecological pressure on native European fauna. Walking catfish has also been introduced in the freshwaters of Florida, with the voracious catfish becoming a major alien pest there."Many game fish and shellfish come in to feed or breed among the roots of the mangroves," he explains. "Without the mangroves, you might see the end of most of the estuarine fishery in south Florida."http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,959247,00.html Armored suckermouth catfish, released by aquarium fishkeepers, has also established wild populations in many warm waters around the world. They're wild cards that have a domino effect on the environment and our economy. They degrade habitats, harm native species, bring in diseases, cost money to control and threaten the uniqueness and biodiversity.http://www.tampabayaquarium.com/invaders.htm

Trivia

  • In the United States, June 25 is National Catfish Day.
  • Noodling is a sport of catching catfish using only one's bare hands.

Notable catfish

  • Mekong giant catfish, the largest reported freshwater fish
  • Iridescent shark, common food fish in parts of Asia
  • Channel catfish, common food fish in the U.S.
  • Walking catfish, food fish in Asia and invasive species in Florida
  • Redtail catfish, ornamental aquarium fish
  • Glass catfish, popular ornamental aquarium fish
  • Candirú, parasitic catfish that can attack humans
  • Panaque spp, the only fishes able to eat and digest wood
  • L46 Zebra Pleco, maybe the most popular catfish in the world

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  1. Channel Catfish. Fairfax County Public Schools. Retrieved 2006-12-02.
  2. Grizzly Bear-Size Catfish Caught in Thailand. National Geographic News. Retrieved 2006-07-14.
  3. J.E. Morris (October 1993). "Pond Culture of Channel Catfish in the North Central Region". North Central Regional Aquaculture Center. Retrieved 2006-06-28.
  4. http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-catfish28nov28,0,6595048.story?coll=la-home-business L.A. Times, "'Catfish' bred in Asia move up on U.S. food chain", 28 November 2006


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