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Asian swamp eel

The Asian swamp eel (Monopterus albus), also known as rice eel, ricefield eel, rice paddy eel[3] or white rice-field eel,[1] is a commercially important, air-breathing species of fish in the family Synbranchidae. It occurs in East and Southeast Asia, where it is a very common foodstuff sold throughout the region. It has been introduced to two areas near the Everglades in Florida and near Atlanta in Georgia.

Asian swamp eel
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Synbranchiformes
Family: Synbranchidae
Genus: Monopterus
Species:
M. albus
Binomial name
Monopterus albus
(Zuiew, 1793)
Synonyms[2]
  • Muraena alba Zuiew, 1793
  • Fluta alba (Zuiew, 1793)
  • Synbranchus grammicus Cantor, 1842
  • Gymnotus albus Zuiew, 1789
  • Monopterus javanensis Lacepède, 1800
  • Unibranchapertura laevis Lacepède, 1803
  • Monopterus laevis (Lacepède, 1803)
  • Ophicardia phayriana McClelland, 1844
  • Pneumabranchus cinereus McClelland, 1844
  • Monopterus cinereus (McClelland, 1844)
  • Synbranchus xanthognathus Richardson, 1845
  • Monopterus xanthognathus (Richardson, 1845)
  • Ophicardia xanthognatha (Richardson, 1845)
  • Monopterus helvolus Richardson, 1846
  • Monopterus marmoratus Richardson, 1846
  • Apterigia saccogularis Basilewsky, 1855
  • Apterigia nigromaculata Basilewsky, 1855
  • Apterigia immaculata Basilewsky, 1855

Taxonomy edit

The Asian swamp eel is a freshwater, eel-like fish belonging to the family Synbranchidae (swamp eels).[4]

Some work indicates that the species should be split into three geographical clades or cryptic species, although these were not given nomenclatural names, as the taxonomic synonymy was too complex to sort out at the time. The populations in the Ryukyus are distinct, the populations in China and Japan belong to another clade, and the rest, the original M. albus, belong to the third group. Although these groups are too phenotypically similar to tell apart morphologically, they exhibit different brooding behaviours. In the Japanese/Chinese form, the males wait until the fertilised eggs hatch in their foam nests, and then keep the larvae in their mouths until they can breathe their own air. The Ryukyuan populations also make foam nests, but do not keep the larvae in the somewhat narrow buccal cavities in their mouths. The most widespread clade does not make foam nests, but lays the eggs among the roots of floating plants, and shows no parental care. Larvae use their pectoral fins to increase water flow and thus oxygen intake across their skin. This last form shows the most genetic diversity and may belong to numerous cryptic species. This form is also the type that has been introduced to the USA.[5]

M. albus is not an "true" eel' in the order Anguilliformes; it belongs to the order Synbranchiformes.[citation needed]

Description edit

 
Monopterus albus at a restaurant in Mindanao, the Philippines

The Asian swamp eel has a scaleless, anguilliform body that grows to a meter or less, typically 25 to 40 cm as an adult. As a swamp eel, it has a tapering tail and blunt snout, and lacks pectoral and pelvic fins. The dorsal, anal, and caudal fins are rudimentary, with the caudal fin often absent.[4] These fins serve to protect the swamp eel against rolling, and assist in sudden turns and stops. Its gill membranes are fused, but one v-shaped gill is located beneath the head. Such a shape prevents reverse flow.[citation needed]

Their colour is variable, but generally olive or brown, with irregular dark flecks.[3] Individuals in Florida usually have a dark body and head, with dark olive or brown dorsal coloring and light orange ventral coloring. Individuals caught in Florida can be more colourful, indicating breeding for the pet trade.[3][6]

The mouth is large and protractile, and both upper and lower jaws have tiny teeth for eating fishes, worms, crustaceans, and other small aquatic animals.[3]

Similar species edit

M. cuchia, a related species also commonly eaten, has also been introduced to the USA. When it breaths, the throat expands on sides of head, as opposed to ventrally in M. albus. This species also has "suprapharyngeal air chambers", which M. albus does not, and a few scales, which are entirely absent in M. albus. M. cuchia has a single row of teeth, as opposed to two rows.[3]

Distribution edit

It has a wide distribution.[7] Monopterus albus is native to much of East and Southeast Asia, ranging west as far as India.[2] M. albus is native to the tropical and subtropical areas of northern India and Burma to China, Japan, and Indo-Malayan Archipelago,[3] possible populations in Far East Russia and northeastern Australia might belong to different cryptic species.[3][8] It is a common fish in India, Southern China to Malaysia and Indonesia.[citation needed]

The populations in most of Japan (Honshu and Kyushu) are likely introduced from China. The population in the Nara Basin was introduced from Korea in the beginning of the 20th century. Its distribution in Japan is discontinuous, which also indicates that it is introduced within the last millennium or so. The eels found in Taiwan appear to belong to two different species, a Japanese form was introduced in 1940, but a Southeast Asian form is also common and may have also been introduced or be native.[5] The eels were first introduced to the Oahu in Hawaiian Islands around 1900, where they still occur.[3][9] Earliest record of the fish in the Philippines is in 1918 from a collection by the Commercial Museum of Philadelphia where it has become an invasive species.[10][11][12]

Locations in the Southeastern United States were not colonized until the end of the 20th century.[3] Around 1990, the eels were introduced to several ponds at a nature center near Atlanta, Georgia, within the Chattahoochee River drainage basin; by 1994, individuals had migrated to an adjacent marsh, the Chattahoochee Nature Center north of Atlanta.[13] Subsequently, eels were collected from Florida waters in 1997 at two widely separated areas, one in southeast and the other in west-central Florida.[6] Tens of thousands of swamp eels are estimated to inhabit nearly 55 miles of two water canal systems in southern Florida, one in the North Miami area and another on the eastern side of Everglades National Park. Two other populations of the eels have been discovered since 1993, one outside of Tampa, Florida, and one in southern Georgia near the Chattahoochee River.[14] One or more of the populations are believed to be the result of an intentional or accidental release of the creature from a home aquarium or fish farm. Some populations may have been the result of an attempt by a few local residents to establish the eels as a food source.[3]

Ecology edit

M. albus is a nocturnal animal. Its diet includes other fish, shrimp, crayfish, frogs, turtle eggs, aquatic invertebrates such as worms and insects, and occasionally detritus.[3]

An old document from 1958 claimed M. albus is capable of moving over dry land, but many years of study found no evidence for this.[3][6]

Habitat edit

 
Introduced Asian swamp eels in Georgia in the United States

The preferred environment for the Asian swamp eel includes a wide variety of muddy, freshwater, shallow wetlands, such as rice paddies, ditches, ponds, marshes, streams, rivers, canals, lakes, and reservoirs. Depths less than 3 m are optimal. M. albus can live in a wide range of oxygen levels. This fish can obtain up to 25% oxygen from air transcutaneously if not using gills under water.[3]

Lifecycle edit

The Asian swamp eel is hermaphroditic. All young are females. As juvenile fish begin to mature, some take on the masculine phenotype. Males are capable of changing sex, allowing them to replenish female populations when female densities are low. This change from one sex to another can take up to a year.[15]

Spawning can occur throughout the year.[16] Some Japanese and Chinese forms of M. albus exhibit a great deal of parental care. Large males construct bubble nests at the mouth of burrows and guard the eggs and young.[3][5] In some Japanese and Chinese forms, eggs are laid in bubble nests located in shallow waters. These bubble nests float at the water's surface and are not attached to aquatic vegetation. Females produce up to 1,000 eggs, each, per spawning event.[5][16]

Disease edit

Swamp eels are a host for Gnathostoma spinigerum. Eating raw or undercooked swamp eel could cause gnathostomiasis, a disease that occurs in Thailand and Vietnam.[17][18][19]

Uses edit

 
Dish of rice with swamp eel in China

The fish is an important protein source for people in Thailand.[17] It is cultured throughout Vietnam.[19] In Indonesia, Cambodia, China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, and other Asian countries, swamp eels are farmed in polyculture rice fields and sold as a food product with the rice crop.[citation needed]

In Balinese, the eels are known as lindung, they are sold dried in almost all village markets for use in Hindu offerings.[20]

In Japan, it is known as ta-unagi, from 田, pronounced "ta", meaning paddy and 鰻, pronounced "unagi", meaning eel, usually written in katakana as タウナギ, and usually not eaten.[21][22][23]

In addition to being useful as a food. This species of eel is also often released into natural water resources in Thailand. According to the belief of the Thai people that it will help to end suffering and sorrow, or as a merit as releasing other fish or other aquatic animals such as climbing perch (Anabas testudineus), striped snakehead (Channa striata), Chinese edible frog (Hoplobatrachus rugulosus), pond snail (Filopaludina martensi) etc.[24]

Conservation edit

Asian swamp eels might pose a future threat to the environment of Everglades National Park, although preliminary studies reported no deleterious ecological effects in Florida. However, more recent studies[25] in the Everglades do show several species faced precipitous declines after the introduction of swamp eels. Two crayfish became nearly absent from areas with swamp eels, and other species of fish also saw significant declines. The United States Geological Survey has used several methods to control the M. albus population here. They discourage catching and transporting the eel.[3] Water-management structures near established swamp eel populations are not being opened to prevent or at least retard dispersal, particularly into the waters of the park.[26] Adult and juvenile swamp eels are air-breathers, while young absorb oxygen directly through the skin. As such, standard fish poisons or piscicides (e.g., rotenone and antimycin A) that are transmitted across the gill membrane may not be effective. Serial pesticide dilutions of antimycin-A were tested and found to be innocuous. No changes in morbidity and mortality were observed.[13] The fish in the United States likely originate from a different areas in Asia, and are slightly different in characteristics.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Ame, E.C.; Ballad, E.L. & Kesner-Reyes, K. (2021). "Monopterus albus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2021: e.T166148A162163341. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2021-2.RLTS.T166148A162163341.en. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
  2. ^ a b Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2019). "Monopterus albus" in FishBase. March 2019 version.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Fuller, P.L., L.G. Nico, and M. Cannister. ( 11 30 2010). "Asian swamp eel." Nonindigenous Aquatic Species. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 15 Mar 2011.
  4. ^ a b Nelson, J.S. Fishes of the World. 3rd. New York City: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1994. Print.
  5. ^ a b c d Matsumoto, Seiji; Kon, Takeshi; Yamaguchi, Motoomi; Takeshima, Hirohiko (19 August 2009). "Cryptic diversification of the swamp eel Monopterus albus in East and Southeast Asia, with special reference to the Ryukyuan populations". Ichthyological Research. 57 (1): 71–77. doi:10.1007/s10228-009-0125-y. ISSN 1341-8998. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  6. ^ a b c Shafland, Paul L., Kelly B. Gestring, and Murray S. Stanford (2010). "An Assessment of the Asian Swamp Eel (Monopterus albus) in Florida." Reviews in Fisheries Science. 18.1: 25-39
  7. ^ M.albus distribution September 28, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ a b Collins, Timothy M., Joel C. Trexler, Leo G. Nico, and Timothy A. Rawlings (2002). "Genetic Diversity in a Morphologically Conservative Invasive Taxon: Multiple Introductions of Swamp Eels to the Southeastern United States." Conservation Biology. 16.4: 1024-1035
  9. ^ Clay, Keith (2003). "Parasites Lost". Nature. 421 (6923): 585–586. doi:10.1038/421585a. PMID 12571575. S2CID 1967346.
  10. ^ Fowler, Henry W. (1918). "A List of Philippine Fishes". Copeia (58): 62–65. ISSN 0045-8511.
  11. ^ Herre, Albert W.C.T. (August 1923). "A review of the eels of the Philippine archipelago". The Philippine Journal of Science. 23 (2): 125–126 – via Biodiversity Library.
  12. ^ Guerrero III, Rafael D. III (June 2014). "Impacts of Introduced Freshwater Fishes in the Philippines (1905-2013): A Review and Recommendations" (PDF). Philippine Journal of Science. 143 (1): 49–59.
  13. ^ a b Reinert, T. R., C. A. Straight, et al. (2006). "Effectiveness of atimycin-A as a toxicant for control of invasive Asian swamp eels." North American Journal of Fisheries Management 26(4): 949-952.
  14. ^ Daerr, Elizabeth G.(2000). "Asian swamp eel invades Florida." National Parks. 74.5/6: 13-14.
  15. ^ Talwar, P.K. "Asian Swamp Eel." FishBase.org. Retrieved 13 Mar 2011.
  16. ^ a b Chivers, C.J. (1999). "Swamp aka Rice Eels." Wildlife Conservation. 102.2: 18.
  17. ^ a b Setasuban P; Nuamtanong S; Rojanakittikoon V; Yaemput S; Dekumyoy P; Akahane H; Kojima S (1991). "Gnathostomiasis in Thailand: a survey on intermediate hosts of Gnathostoma spp. with special reference to a new type of larvae found in Fluta alba". Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health. 22 Supplement: 220–4. PMID 1822890.
  18. ^ Akahane H, Setasuban P, Nuamtanong S, Horiuchi S, Koga M, Kojima S (1995). "A new type of advanced third-stage larvae of the genus Gnathostoma in freshwater eels, Fluta alba, from Nakhon Nayok, central Thailand". Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health. 26 (4): 743–7. PMID 9139388.
  19. ^ a b Tran Phu Manh Sieu; Tran Thi Kim Dung; Nguyen Thi Quynh Nga; Tran Vinh Hien; Anders Dalsgaard; Jitra Waikagul; K. Darwin Murrell (2009). "Prevalence of Gnathostoma spinigerum infection in wild and cultured swamp eels in Vietnam". Journal of Parasitology. 95 (1): 246–248. doi:10.1645/GE-1586.1. PMID 19245276. S2CID 23748298.
  20. ^ "Lindung". BASAbali. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  21. ^ 1988, 国語大辞典(新装版) (Kokugo Dai Jiten, Revised Edition) (in Japanese), Tōkyō: Shogakukan
  22. ^ 2006, 大辞林 (Daijirin), Third Edition (in Japanese), Tōkyō: Sanseidō, ISBN 4-385-13905-9
  23. ^ 1995, 大辞泉 (Daijisen) (in Japanese), Tōkyō: Shogakukan, ISBN 4-09-501211-0
  24. ^ "'แก้เคราะห์-เสริมดวงชะตา' แบบไหนถึงได้บุญ". Daily News (in Thai). 2020-07-06. Retrieved 2023-06-10.
  25. ^ Pintar; M, Dorn, N; Kline, J; and Trexler, J. (2023) Hydrology-mediated ecological function of a large wetland threatened by an invasive predator. Science of the Total Environment, Vol. 857, part 1. 20 January 2023.
  26. ^ McPherson, B.F., Miller, R.L., Haag, K.H., and Bradner, Anne. (2000) Water Quality in Southern Florida. Florida,1996–98: U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1207, 32 p.

External links edit

  • Froese, Rainer, and Daniel Pauly, eds. (2006). "Synbranchidae" in FishBase. April 2006 version.
  • Invasive Species Specialist Group
  • Species Profile - Asian Swamp Eel (Monopterus albus), National Invasive Species Information Center, United States National Agricultural Library
  • Monopterus albus, US Army Corps of Engineers
  • Life History Data on Monopterus albus, Asian swamp eel

asian, swamp, confused, with, rice, paddy, pisodonophis, boro, monopterus, albus, also, known, rice, ricefield, rice, paddy, white, rice, field, commercially, important, breathing, species, fish, family, synbranchidae, occurs, east, southeast, asia, where, ver. Not to be confused with the rice paddy eel Pisodonophis boro The Asian swamp eel Monopterus albus also known as rice eel ricefield eel rice paddy eel 3 or white rice field eel 1 is a commercially important air breathing species of fish in the family Synbranchidae It occurs in East and Southeast Asia where it is a very common foodstuff sold throughout the region It has been introduced to two areas near the Everglades in Florida and near Atlanta in Georgia Asian swamp eelConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ActinopterygiiOrder SynbranchiformesFamily SynbranchidaeGenus MonopterusSpecies M albusBinomial nameMonopterus albus Zuiew 1793 Synonyms 2 Muraena alba Zuiew 1793 Fluta alba Zuiew 1793 Synbranchus grammicus Cantor 1842 Gymnotus albus Zuiew 1789 Monopterus javanensis Lacepede 1800 Unibranchapertura laevis Lacepede 1803 Monopterus laevis Lacepede 1803 Ophicardia phayriana McClelland 1844 Pneumabranchus cinereus McClelland 1844 Monopterus cinereus McClelland 1844 Synbranchus xanthognathus Richardson 1845 Monopterus xanthognathus Richardson 1845 Ophicardia xanthognatha Richardson 1845 Monopterus helvolus Richardson 1846 Monopterus marmoratus Richardson 1846 Apterigia saccogularis Basilewsky 1855 Apterigia nigromaculata Basilewsky 1855 Apterigia immaculata Basilewsky 1855 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Similar species 3 Distribution 4 Ecology 4 1 Habitat 4 2 Lifecycle 4 3 Disease 5 Uses 6 Conservation 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy editThe Asian swamp eel is a freshwater eel like fish belonging to the family Synbranchidae swamp eels 4 Some work indicates that the species should be split into three geographical clades or cryptic species although these were not given nomenclatural names as the taxonomic synonymy was too complex to sort out at the time The populations in the Ryukyus are distinct the populations in China and Japan belong to another clade and the rest the original M albus belong to the third group Although these groups are too phenotypically similar to tell apart morphologically they exhibit different brooding behaviours In the Japanese Chinese form the males wait until the fertilised eggs hatch in their foam nests and then keep the larvae in their mouths until they can breathe their own air The Ryukyuan populations also make foam nests but do not keep the larvae in the somewhat narrow buccal cavities in their mouths The most widespread clade does not make foam nests but lays the eggs among the roots of floating plants and shows no parental care Larvae use their pectoral fins to increase water flow and thus oxygen intake across their skin This last form shows the most genetic diversity and may belong to numerous cryptic species This form is also the type that has been introduced to the USA 5 M albus is not an true eel in the order Anguilliformes it belongs to the order Synbranchiformes citation needed Description edit nbsp Monopterus albus at a restaurant in Mindanao the PhilippinesThe Asian swamp eel has a scaleless anguilliform body that grows to a meter or less typically 25 to 40 cm as an adult As a swamp eel it has a tapering tail and blunt snout and lacks pectoral and pelvic fins The dorsal anal and caudal fins are rudimentary with the caudal fin often absent 4 These fins serve to protect the swamp eel against rolling and assist in sudden turns and stops Its gill membranes are fused but one v shaped gill is located beneath the head Such a shape prevents reverse flow citation needed Their colour is variable but generally olive or brown with irregular dark flecks 3 Individuals in Florida usually have a dark body and head with dark olive or brown dorsal coloring and light orange ventral coloring Individuals caught in Florida can be more colourful indicating breeding for the pet trade 3 6 The mouth is large and protractile and both upper and lower jaws have tiny teeth for eating fishes worms crustaceans and other small aquatic animals 3 Similar species edit M cuchia a related species also commonly eaten has also been introduced to the USA When it breaths the throat expands on sides of head as opposed to ventrally in M albus This species also has suprapharyngeal air chambers which M albus does not and a few scales which are entirely absent in M albus M cuchia has a single row of teeth as opposed to two rows 3 Distribution editIt has a wide distribution 7 Monopterus albus is native to much of East and Southeast Asia ranging west as far as India 2 M albus is native to the tropical and subtropical areas of northern India and Burma to China Japan and Indo Malayan Archipelago 3 possible populations in Far East Russia and northeastern Australia might belong to different cryptic species 3 8 It is a common fish in India Southern China to Malaysia and Indonesia citation needed The populations in most of Japan Honshu and Kyushu are likely introduced from China The population in the Nara Basin was introduced from Korea in the beginning of the 20th century Its distribution in Japan is discontinuous which also indicates that it is introduced within the last millennium or so The eels found in Taiwan appear to belong to two different species a Japanese form was introduced in 1940 but a Southeast Asian form is also common and may have also been introduced or be native 5 The eels were first introduced to the Oahu in Hawaiian Islands around 1900 where they still occur 3 9 Earliest record of the fish in the Philippines is in 1918 from a collection by the Commercial Museum of Philadelphia where it has become an invasive species 10 11 12 Locations in the Southeastern United States were not colonized until the end of the 20th century 3 Around 1990 the eels were introduced to several ponds at a nature center near Atlanta Georgia within the Chattahoochee River drainage basin by 1994 individuals had migrated to an adjacent marsh the Chattahoochee Nature Center north of Atlanta 13 Subsequently eels were collected from Florida waters in 1997 at two widely separated areas one in southeast and the other in west central Florida 6 Tens of thousands of swamp eels are estimated to inhabit nearly 55 miles of two water canal systems in southern Florida one in the North Miami area and another on the eastern side of Everglades National Park Two other populations of the eels have been discovered since 1993 one outside of Tampa Florida and one in southern Georgia near the Chattahoochee River 14 One or more of the populations are believed to be the result of an intentional or accidental release of the creature from a home aquarium or fish farm Some populations may have been the result of an attempt by a few local residents to establish the eels as a food source 3 Ecology editM albus is a nocturnal animal Its diet includes other fish shrimp crayfish frogs turtle eggs aquatic invertebrates such as worms and insects and occasionally detritus 3 An old document from 1958 claimed M albus is capable of moving over dry land but many years of study found no evidence for this 3 6 Habitat edit nbsp Introduced Asian swamp eels in Georgia in the United StatesThe preferred environment for the Asian swamp eel includes a wide variety of muddy freshwater shallow wetlands such as rice paddies ditches ponds marshes streams rivers canals lakes and reservoirs Depths less than 3 m are optimal M albus can live in a wide range of oxygen levels This fish can obtain up to 25 oxygen from air transcutaneously if not using gills under water 3 Lifecycle edit The Asian swamp eel is hermaphroditic All young are females As juvenile fish begin to mature some take on the masculine phenotype Males are capable of changing sex allowing them to replenish female populations when female densities are low This change from one sex to another can take up to a year 15 Spawning can occur throughout the year 16 Some Japanese and Chinese forms of M albus exhibit a great deal of parental care Large males construct bubble nests at the mouth of burrows and guard the eggs and young 3 5 In some Japanese and Chinese forms eggs are laid in bubble nests located in shallow waters These bubble nests float at the water s surface and are not attached to aquatic vegetation Females produce up to 1 000 eggs each per spawning event 5 16 Disease edit Swamp eels are a host for Gnathostoma spinigerum Eating raw or undercooked swamp eel could cause gnathostomiasis a disease that occurs in Thailand and Vietnam 17 18 19 Uses edit nbsp Dish of rice with swamp eel in ChinaThe fish is an important protein source for people in Thailand 17 It is cultured throughout Vietnam 19 In Indonesia Cambodia China Laos Myanmar Thailand Vietnam and other Asian countries swamp eels are farmed in polyculture rice fields and sold as a food product with the rice crop citation needed In Balinese the eels are known as lindung they are sold dried in almost all village markets for use in Hindu offerings 20 In Japan it is known as ta unagi from 田 pronounced ta meaning paddy and 鰻 pronounced unagi meaning eel usually written in katakana as タウナギ and usually not eaten 21 22 23 In addition to being useful as a food This species of eel is also often released into natural water resources in Thailand According to the belief of the Thai people that it will help to end suffering and sorrow or as a merit as releasing other fish or other aquatic animals such as climbing perch Anabas testudineus striped snakehead Channa striata Chinese edible frog Hoplobatrachus rugulosus pond snail Filopaludina martensi etc 24 Conservation editAsian swamp eels might pose a future threat to the environment of Everglades National Park although preliminary studies reported no deleterious ecological effects in Florida However more recent studies 25 in the Everglades do show several species faced precipitous declines after the introduction of swamp eels Two crayfish became nearly absent from areas with swamp eels and other species of fish also saw significant declines The United States Geological Survey has used several methods to control the M albus population here They discourage catching and transporting the eel 3 Water management structures near established swamp eel populations are not being opened to prevent or at least retard dispersal particularly into the waters of the park 26 Adult and juvenile swamp eels are air breathers while young absorb oxygen directly through the skin As such standard fish poisons or piscicides e g rotenone and antimycin A that are transmitted across the gill membrane may not be effective Serial pesticide dilutions of antimycin A were tested and found to be innocuous No changes in morbidity and mortality were observed 13 The fish in the United States likely originate from a different areas in Asia and are slightly different in characteristics 8 References edit a b Ame E C Ballad E L amp Kesner Reyes K 2021 Monopterus albus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2021 e T166148A162163341 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2021 2 RLTS T166148A162163341 en Retrieved 6 August 2023 a b Froese Rainer Pauly Daniel eds 2019 Monopterus albus in FishBase March 2019 version a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Fuller P L L G Nico and M Cannister 11 30 2010 Asian swamp eel Nonindigenous Aquatic Species United States Geological Survey Retrieved 15 Mar 2011 a b Nelson J S Fishes of the World 3rd New York City John Wiley amp Sons Inc 1994 Print a b c d Matsumoto Seiji Kon Takeshi Yamaguchi Motoomi Takeshima Hirohiko 19 August 2009 Cryptic diversification of the swamp eel Monopterus albus in East and Southeast Asia with special reference to the Ryukyuan populations Ichthyological Research 57 1 71 77 doi 10 1007 s10228 009 0125 y ISSN 1341 8998 Retrieved 8 November 2020 a b c Shafland Paul L Kelly B Gestring and Murray S Stanford 2010 An Assessment of the Asian Swamp Eel Monopterus albus in Florida Reviews in Fisheries Science 18 1 25 39 M albus distribution Archived September 28 2011 at the Wayback Machine a b Collins Timothy M Joel C Trexler Leo G Nico and Timothy A Rawlings 2002 Genetic Diversity in a Morphologically Conservative Invasive Taxon Multiple Introductions of Swamp Eels to the Southeastern United States Conservation Biology 16 4 1024 1035 Clay Keith 2003 Parasites Lost Nature 421 6923 585 586 doi 10 1038 421585a PMID 12571575 S2CID 1967346 Fowler Henry W 1918 A List of Philippine Fishes Copeia 58 62 65 ISSN 0045 8511 Herre Albert W C T August 1923 A review of the eels of the Philippine archipelago The Philippine Journal of Science 23 2 125 126 via Biodiversity Library Guerrero III Rafael D III June 2014 Impacts of Introduced Freshwater Fishes in the Philippines 1905 2013 A Review and Recommendations PDF Philippine Journal of Science 143 1 49 59 a b Reinert T R C A Straight et al 2006 Effectiveness of atimycin A as a toxicant for control of invasive Asian swamp eels North American Journal of Fisheries Management 26 4 949 952 Daerr Elizabeth G 2000 Asian swamp eel invades Florida National Parks 74 5 6 13 14 Talwar P K Asian Swamp Eel FishBase org Retrieved 13 Mar 2011 a b Chivers C J 1999 Swamp aka Rice Eels Wildlife Conservation 102 2 18 a b Setasuban P Nuamtanong S Rojanakittikoon V Yaemput S Dekumyoy P Akahane H Kojima S 1991 Gnathostomiasis in Thailand a survey on intermediate hosts of Gnathostoma spp with special reference to a new type of larvae found in Fluta alba Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health 22 Supplement 220 4 PMID 1822890 Akahane H Setasuban P Nuamtanong S Horiuchi S Koga M Kojima S 1995 A new type of advanced third stage larvae of the genus Gnathostoma in freshwater eels Fluta alba from Nakhon Nayok central Thailand Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health 26 4 743 7 PMID 9139388 a b Tran Phu Manh Sieu Tran Thi Kim Dung Nguyen Thi Quynh Nga Tran Vinh Hien Anders Dalsgaard Jitra Waikagul K Darwin Murrell 2009 Prevalence of Gnathostoma spinigerum infection in wild and cultured swamp eels in Vietnam Journal of Parasitology 95 1 246 248 doi 10 1645 GE 1586 1 PMID 19245276 S2CID 23748298 Lindung BASAbali Retrieved 8 November 2020 1988 国語大辞典 新装版 Kokugo Dai Jiten Revised Edition in Japanese Tōkyō Shogakukan 2006 大辞林 Daijirin Third Edition in Japanese Tōkyō Sanseidō ISBN 4 385 13905 9 1995 大辞泉 Daijisen in Japanese Tōkyō Shogakukan ISBN 4 09 501211 0 aekekhraah esrimdwngchata aebbihnthungidbuy Daily News in Thai 2020 07 06 Retrieved 2023 06 10 Pintar M Dorn N Kline J and Trexler J 2023 Hydrology mediated ecological function of a large wetland threatened by an invasive predator Science of the Total Environment Vol 857 part 1 20 January 2023 McPherson B F Miller R L Haag K H and Bradner Anne 2000 Water Quality in Southern Florida Florida 1996 98 U S Geological Survey Circular 1207 32 p External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Monopterus albus Froese Rainer and Daniel Pauly eds 2006 Synbranchidae in FishBase April 2006 version Invasive Species Specialist Group Species Profile Asian Swamp Eel Monopterus albus National Invasive Species Information Center United States National Agricultural Library Monopterus albus US Army Corps of Engineers Life History Data on Monopterus albus Asian swamp eel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asian swamp eel amp oldid 1206713204, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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