Freshwater fishes of Israel; a revised and updated annotated checklist- 2023
Author
Çiçek, Erdoğan
Department of Biology, Faculty of Art and Sciences, Nevşehir Hacı BektaşVeli University, Nevşehir, Türkiye
Author
Fricke, Ronald
Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde in Stuttgart, Rosenstein 1, 70191 Stuttgart, Germany
Author
Sungur, Sevil
Health Services Vocational School, Nevşehir Hacı BektaşVeli University, Nevşehir, Türkiye
Author
Çapar, Osman Bahadir
Faculty of Fisheries, Cukurova University, Türkiye
Author
Golani, Daniel
Deparment of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-11-13
5369
4
451
484
https://www.mapress.com/zt/article/download/zootaxa.5369.4.1/52255
journal article
278560
10.11646/zootaxa.5369.4.1
8a95fa8d-aaf9-4550-9a5b-0e8408ecb1bd
1175-5326
10146651
62878FA8-7CC7-462C-9FBF-C9BAEF177855
Oreochromis niloticus
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
[I]—Nile tilapia; Amnun ha’yeor
Taxonomy.
Original description:
Perca niloticus
Linnaeus, 1758: 290
[Nile
River
;
holotype
:?NRM LP 10].—Israeli synonyms:
Perca nilotica
Linnaeus, 1758
;
Tilapia nilotica
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
;
Chromis niloticus
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
;
Tilapia vulcani
Trewavas, 1933
.—Revisions: None.—Illustration: Ye in
Pan
et al.
(1991: 416
, fig. 248) as
Tilapia nilotica
, Teugels & Thys van den Audenaerde
in
Lévêque
et al.
(1992: 761
, fig. 49.36).
Status in
Israel
.
First record from Israel by
Lortet (1883: 137)
and
Tristram (1884: 164)
as
Chromis niloticus
, and by
Steinitz (1953: 513)
as
Tilapia nilotica exul
,
Fishelson (1962)
as
Tilapia nilotica
;
confirmed by
Goren (1974: 102)
as
Tilapia nilotica
,
Goren & Ortal (1999: 4)
.—Israel material: None.
Distribution and habitat.
Distribution in
Israel
: Only several, not confirmed, specimens, were collected in the coastal plain. They are escapees from aquaculture.—Distribution in River Basin: 1-Western Basin.—General distribution: North Africa and East Africa. Widely introduced elsewhere.—Distribution in Ecoregion: 436-Coastal Levant.—Habitat: This species inhabits a very wide range of flowing water habitats, from fast-flowing headwaters and reservoirs to polluted canals and large lowland rivers. It is the most environmentally tolerant of all tilapia species, tolerating lack of oxygen, pollution, salinity, etc. Low water temperatures (below 10–13
°
C) limit its occurrence. Freshwater, brackish.
Economic importance.
None in
Israel
, elsewhere commercially important.
Reasons of introduction.
Aquaculture.
Conservation.
Not relevant (introduced species).