Systematics of the Stripetail Darter, Etheostoma kennicotti (Putnam), and the Distinctiveness of the Upper Cumberland Endemic Etheostoma cumberlandicum Jordan and Swain
Author
Near, Thomas J.
Author
Simmons, Jeffrey W.
Author
Strange, Rex M.
Author
Brandt, Stephanie
Author
Thomas, Matthew R.
Author
Harrington, Richard C.
Author
MacGuigan, Daniel J.
text
Ichthyology & Herpetology
2023
2023-04-18
111
2
203
221
http://dx.doi.org/10.1643/i2021053
journal article
302900
10.1643/i2021053
fc1c79b6-6a91-4df6-b235-7260123dc2e2
2766-1520
13744528
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
Jordan
and Swain, 1883
:
251
Moonbow Darter
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
4BF24D57-46C2-4DA8-9D8C- E9A26D880DC1
Figure 5A, B
;
Tables 5–11
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
:
Jordan
and Swain, 1883: 251 (meristic data and species description); Page and Smith, 1976: 533 (listed as synonym of
Etheostoma kennicotti
); Page, 1983: 149 (referenced as a synonym of
Etheostoma kennicotti
); Beckham, 1983: 27 (referenced as a synonym of
Etheostoma kennicotti
); Braasch and Mayden, 1985: 53 (referenced as a synonym of
Etheostoma kennicotti
).
Etheostoma flabellare cumberlandicum
:
Jordan
and Evermann 1898: 1098 (morphology, geographic distribution, and listed as a subspecies of
Etheostoma flabellare
); Ross and Carico, 1963: 12 (listed as a subspecies of
Etheostoma flabellare
); Collette and Knapp, 1966: 25 (listed as a subspecies of
Etheostoma flabellare
).
Catonotus kennicotti cumberlandicus
: Shoup and Peyton, 1940: 111 (distribution in Jellico Creek system and listed as a subspecies of
Etheostoma kennicotti
).
Etheostoma kennicotti cumberlandicum
: Page and Smith, 1976: 532 (listed as a subspecies, but it was placed into the synonymy of
Etheostoma kennicotti
); Smith, 1979: 288 (referenced as a synonym of
Etheostoma kennicotti
); Braasch and Mayden, 1985: 53 (referenced as a synonym of
Etheostoma kennicotti
); Burr and Warren, 1986: 304 (referenced as a synonym of
Etheostoma kennicotti
); Etnier and Starnes, 1993: 500 (referenced as a synonym of
Etheostoma kennicotti
).
Etheostoma kennicotti
: Carter and Jones, 1969: 13, 67 (presence in Poor Fork of the upper Cumberland River system); Comiskey and Etnier, 1972: 143 (distribution in Big South Fork system); Page and Smith, 1976: tables 3–6, fig. 2 (meristic trait variation and pigmentation); Starnes and Starnes, 1978: 515 (syntopic with
Chrosomus cumberlandensis
[Starnes and Starnes] in the upper Cumberland River system); Wolfe et al., 1979 (allozyme variation); Wolfe and Branson, 1979 (LDH isozyme variation); Burr, 1980: 76 (distribution in upper Cumberland River system); Page, 1983: 149, map 80 (geographic distribution and morphological variation); Page and Schemske, 1978 (geographic distribution and body size); O’Bara and Estes, 1984: 10–12 (presence in the Clear Fork system in upper Cumberland River system); Burr and Warren, 1986: 304 (geographic distribution and habitat notes); Etnier and Starnes, 1993: 499–500, range map 227, plate 235b (photograph of nuptial condition male, geographic distribution, diet, and life history notes); Song et al., 1998: tables 1, 2, figs. 1, 3–5 (phylogenetic relationships); Strange, 1998: 101 (distribution in upper Cumberland River system); Porterfield et al., 1999: figs. 2–6 (phylogenetic relationships); Near et al., 2011: table 1, figs. 3, 4 (classification and phylogenetic relationships).
Lectotype
.—
Designated by Collette and Knapp (1966: 25). USNM 36502,
41 mm
standard length (SL), Wolf Creek a tributary of Clear Fork, near Pleasant View, Whitley Co., Kentucky, D. S.
Jordan
, J. Swain, and C. H. Gilbert,
May 1883
.
Paralectotypes
.—
Designated by Collette and Knapp (1966: 25). USNM 197992,
4 specimens
,
20–42 mm
SL, same collection information as
lectotype
.
Material examined.—
A total of
263 specimens
,
25–62 mm
SL (see Material Examined).
Table 10. Counts of left pectoral-fin rays in
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
and
E. kennicotti
. Abbreviations:
n
, number of specimens; SD, standard deviation.
Number of left pectoral-fin rays |
Species |
Drainage |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
n
|
Mean |
SD |
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
|
Upper Cumberland |
2 |
69 |
169 |
17 |
257 |
12.78 |
0.57 |
Etheostoma kennicotti
|
Laurel River |
2 |
61 |
18 |
81 |
12.20 |
0.46 |
Ohio–Clarks |
3 |
17 |
12 |
32 |
12.28 |
0.63 |
Green |
2 |
11 |
7 |
20 |
12.25 |
0.64 |
Lower Tennessee |
15 |
119 |
43 |
1 |
178 |
12.17 |
0.57 |
Upper Tennessee |
11 |
91 |
16 |
2 |
120 |
12.08 |
0.54 |
FIG. 4. Morphological disparity in
Etheostoma kennicotti
sensu lato
and
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
. (A) Plot of first and second principal component scores of meristic traits in
Etheostoma kennicotti
sensu lato
and
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
. (B) Mahalanobis distances of PC scores for contrasts of species in the
Etheostoma kennicotti
complex. In each comparison, the red and blue lineages on the
cytb
phylogeny are contrasted. A lineage that is a dashed branch is not included in the contrast. The comparison between the upper (U.) Tennessee and lower (L.) Tennessee River is considered an intraspecific contrast.
Diagnosis.—
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
is distinguished from all other species referred to as
E. kennicotti
by a modal count of 13 versus 12 rays in the pectoral fin and modally seven caudal bands versus modally nine or ten caudal bands (
Tables 10
, 11), 88.3% of specimens of
E. cumberlandicum
have eight or fewer caudal bands and 82.7% specimens of
E. kennicotti
(s.l.) have nine or more caudal bands.
Distribution.—
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
is distributed in the Roaring Paunch Creek system, a tributary of the Big South Fork and in the Cumberland River system above Cumberland Falls. Collections of
E. cumberlandicum
closest to Cumberland Falls include Eagle Creek, McCreary Co.,
Kentucky
(UT 91.3177) and Bunches Creek, Whitely Co.,
Kentucky
(UT 91.3122). In addition to the main stem of the Cumberland River, major tributary systems above the Cumberland Falls occupied by
E. cumberlandicum
include Marsh Creek, Jellico Creek, Clear Fork, Greasy Creek, Clear Creek, Yellow Creek, Brownies Creek, and Poor Fork of the Cumberland River (
Fig. 1
). Collections of
E. cumberlandicum
include locations in Bell, Harlan, Letcher, McCreary, and Whitely Counties,
Kentucky
and Campbell, Claiborne, and Scott Counties,
Tennessee
(
Fig. 1
).
Table 11. Counts of caudal bands in
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
and
E. kennicotti
. Abbreviations:
n
, number of specimens; SD, standard deviation. Only specimens 44.0 mm and greather in standard length included. Data included from Page and Smith (1976: table 7).
Number of caudal bands
|
Species
|
Drainage
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
n
|
Mean
|
SD
|
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
|
Upper Cumberland |
4 |
55 |
39 |
11 |
2 |
111 |
7.57 |
0.79 |
Etheostoma kennicotti
|
Laurel River |
1 |
4 |
5 |
8 |
18 |
9.11 |
0.96 |
Ohio–Clarks |
16 |
23 |
2 |
41 |
9.66 |
0.57 |
Green |
1 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
5 |
8.60 |
1.40 |
Lower Tennessee |
1 |
4 |
1 |
2 |
8 |
8.75 |
1.49 |
Upper Tennessee |
6 |
15 |
9 |
2 |
32 |
9.22 |
0.83 |
Etymology.—
While not stated directly, it is clear the specific epithet
Etheostoma cumberlandicum
is in reference to the location of the species in the Cumberland River system (
Jordan
and Swain, 1883). The common name Moonbow Darter is in reference to the rare ‘‘moonbow’’ associated with Cumberland Falls. On bright moonlit nights, mist rising from the water plunging over the waterfall refracts the moonlight producing an effect similar to a rainbow, but with less vivid colors.