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Tarpon

Tarpon are fish of the genus Megalops. They are the only members of the family Megalopidae. Of the two species, one (M. atlanticus) is native to the Atlantic, and the other (M. cyprinoides) to the Indo-Pacific Oceans.

Tarpon
Temporal range: Albian–present [1][2]
Atlantic tarpon
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Superorder: Elopomorpha
Order: Elopiformes
Family: Megalopidae
D. S. Jordan, 1923
Genus: Megalops
Valenciennes, 1847
Species
Synonyms[3]
  • Amia Browne 1756 ex Browne 1789 non Gronow 1763 ex Gray 1854 non Meuschen 1781 non Linnaeus 1766
  • Brisbania de Castelnau 1878
  • Cyprinodon Hamilton 1822 non Lacépède 1803
  • Oculeus Commerson ex Lacépède 1803
  • Tarpon Jordan & Evermann 1896

Species and habitats edit

The two species of tarpon are M. atlanticus (Atlantic tarpon) and M. cyprinoides (Indo-Pacific tarpon). M. atlanticus is found on the western Atlantic coast from Virginia to Brazil, throughout the Caribbean and the coast of the Gulf of Mexico. Tarpon are also found along the eastern Atlantic coast from Senegal to South Angola.[4] M. cyprinoides is found along the eastern African coast, throughout Southeast Asia, Japan, Tahiti, and Australia. Both species are found in marine and freshwater habitats, usually ascending rivers to access freshwater marshes.[5] They are able to survive in brackish water, waters of varying pH, and habitats with low dissolved O
2
content due to their swim bladders, which they use primarily to breathe. They can also rise to the surface and take gulps of air, giving them a short burst of energy. The habitats of tarpon vary greatly with their developmental stages. Stage-one larvae are usually found in clear, warm, oceanic waters, relatively close to the surface. Stage-two and -three larvae are found in salt marshes, tidal pools, creeks, and rivers. Their habitats are characteristically warm, shallow, dark bodies of water with sandy mud bottoms. Tarpon commonly ascend rivers into fresh water. As they progress from the juvenile stage to adulthood, they return to the ocean's open waters, though many remain in freshwater habitats.[6][7]

Fossil species edit

 
Selmasaurus (a mosasaur) hunting a prehistoric tarpon

Fossils of this genus go back to the Cretaceous during the Albian stage 113.0 million years ago (Mya).[8][9]

  • M. priscus (Woodward 1901): A species from the Ypresian stage of the Eocene, 56-47 Mya.
  • M. oblongus (Woodward 1901): A species also from the Ypresian stage of the Eocene, 56-47 Mya. It lived in England along with M. priscus.
  • M. vigilax (Jordan 1927): A fossil species from California dating to the Miocene.[10]

Physical characteristics edit

Tarpon grow to about 4–8 ft (1.2–2.4 m) long and weigh 60–280 lb (27–127 kg). They have dorsal and anal soft rays and bluish or greenish backs. Tarpons possess shiny, silvery scales that cover most of their bodies, excluding the head. They have large eyes with adipose eyelids and broad mouths with prominent lower jaws that jut out farther than the rest of the face.[4][5][6]

Reproduction and lifecycle edit

Tarpon breed offshore in warm, isolated areas. Females have high fecundity and can lay up to 12 million eggs at once. They reach sexual maturity once they are about 75–125 cm (30–50 in) in length. Spawning usually occurs in late spring to early summer.[6] Their three distinct levels of development usually occur in varying habitats. Stage one, or the leptocephalus stage, is completed after 20–30 days. It occurs in clear, warm oceanic waters, usually within 10–20 m of the surface. The leptocephalus shrinks as it develops into a larva; the most shrunken larva, stage two, develops by day 70. This is due to a negative growth phase followed by a sluggish growth phase. By day 70, the juvenile growth phase (stage three) begins, and the fish grows rapidly until sexual maturity.[4][11]

Diet edit

Stage-one developing tarpon do not forage for food but instead absorb nutrients from seawater using integumentary absorption. Stage-two and -three juveniles feed primarily on zooplankton, insects, and small fish. As they progress in juvenile development, especially those developing in freshwater environments, their consumption of insects, fish, crabs, and grass shrimp increases. Adults are strictly carnivorous and feed on midwater prey; they hunt nocturnally and swallow their food whole.[6][7]

Predation edit

The main predators of Megalops during stage-one and early stage-two development are other fish, depending on their size. Juveniles are subject to predation by other juvenile Megalops and piscivorous birds. They are especially vulnerable to birds such as ospreys or other raptors when they come to the surface for air due to the rolling manner in which they move to take in air, as well as the silver scales lining their sides.[12] Adults occasionally fall prey to sharks, porpoises, crocodiles, and alligators.

Swim bladder edit

 
Tarpon swimming

One of the unique features of Megalops is the swim bladder, which, in addition to controlling the buoyancy, can be used as an accessory respiratory organ. It arises dorsally from the posterior pharynx, and the respiratory surface is coated with blood capillaries with a thin epithelium over the top. This is the basis of the alveolar tissue found in the swim bladder and is believed to be one of the primary methods by which Megalops "breathes". This trait is essential due to the mangrove and marsh ecosystems the fish use as nursery habitats, which often have stagnant waters low in oxygen. The juveniles therefore face fewer competitors and predators, but need to breathe atmospheric oxygen to survive.[13] The ability to breathe air is retained in the adults. Even if they live in more oxygenated marine coastal habitats, they have high rates of aerobic metabolism and also occasionally occur in hypoxic waters.[14] These fish are obligate air breathers and will die without sufficient access to the surface. Gas exchange occurs at the surface through a rolling motion commonly associated with tarpon sightings. This "breathing" is believed to be mediated by visual cues, and the frequency of breathing is inversely correlated to the dissolved O
2
content of the water in which they live.[6][15]

Megalops and humans edit

 
A speared tarpon leaps from the water in an 1894 illustration by Hermann Simon.

Tarpon are considered some of the greatest saltwater game fishes, prized not only because of their great size but also because of their fight and spectacular leaping ability. After the International Game Fish Association took responsibility for fly fishing records in salt water (1978), fly fishing for tarpon became increasingly popular, despite declining populations (correlated with the decline of freshwater rivers flowing into the seas around Florida.)[16] Tarpon meat is not desirable, so most are released after being caught.[citation needed] Numerous tournaments are focused on catching tarpon.[17]

The Atlantic tarpon adapts well to water bodies in urban and suburban environments due to their tolerance for boat traffic and low water quality. Around humans, Atlantic tarpon are primarily nocturnal.[18]

Geographical distribution and migration edit

Since tarpon are not commercially valuable as a food fish, very little has been documented concerning their geographical distribution and migrations. They inhabit both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, and their range in the eastern Atlantic has been reliably established from Senegal to the Congo. Tarpon inhabiting the western Atlantic are principally found to populate warmer coastal waters, primarily in the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, Florida, and the West Indies. Nonetheless, tarpon are regularly caught by anglers at Cape Hatteras and as far north as Nova Scotia, Bermuda, and south to Argentina. Scientific studies[19] indicate that schools of tarpon have routinely migrated through the Panama Canal from the Atlantic to the Pacific and back for over 70 years. However, they have not been found to breed in the Pacific Ocean. Nevertheless, anecdotal evidence from tarpon fishing guides and anglers would tend to validate this notion, as over the last 60 years, many small juvenile tarpon as well as mature giants have been caught and documented principally on the Pacific side of Panama at the Bayano River, the Gulf of San Miguel and its tributaries, Coiba Island in the Gulf of Chiriquí, and Piñas Bay in the Gulf of Panama. Since tarpon tolerate wide ranges of salinity throughout their lives and eat almost anything dead or alive, their migrations seemingly are only limited by water temperatures.[citation needed] Tarpon prefer water temperatures of 72 to 82 °F (22 to 28 °C); below 60 °F (16 °C) they become inactive, and temperatures under 40 °F (4 °C) can be lethal.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ Sepkoski, Jack (2002). "A compendium of fossil marine animal genera". Bulletins of American Paleontology. 364: 560. Retrieved 8 January 2008.
  2. ^ "Megalops Lacépède 1803 (ray-finned fish)". PBDB.
  3. ^ . Collection of genus-group names in a systematic arrangement. Archived from the original on 5 October 2016. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  4. ^ a b c " Megalops atlanticus", www.fishbase.org, 11 February 2010.
  5. ^ a b " Megalops cyprinoides", www.fishbase.org, 11 February 2010.
  6. ^ a b c d e Zale, Alexander and Merrifield, Susan G. " Life History and Environmental Requirements of Coastal Fishes and Invertebrates." U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services. 1989.
  7. ^ a b Wade, Richard Archer. "Ecology of Juvenile Tarpon and Effects of Dieldrin on Two Associated Species." Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife. 1969.
  8. ^ "Megalops Tarpon Information". Fossil Guy.
  9. ^ Martin-Medrano, L.; Garcia-Barrera, P. (2006). "Fossil Ophiuroids of Mexico". In F. J. Vega; T. G. Nybor; M. D. C. Perrillat; M. Montellano-Ballesteros; S. R. S. Cevallos-Ferriz; S. A. Quiroz-Barroso (eds.). Studies on Mexican Paleontology. Topics in Geobiology. Vol. 24. pp. 115–131.
  10. ^ David, Lore Rose (16 January 1943). Miocene Fishes of South Carolina. Special Papers. Vol. 43. The Geological Society of America. p. 120. ISBN 9780813720432.
  11. ^ Tsukamoto Y., Okiyama, M. "Metamorphosis of the Pacific Tarpon, Megalops Cyprinoides (Elopiformes, Megalopidae) with Remarks on Development Patterns in the Elopomorpha." Bulletin of Marine Science, 1997.
  12. ^ Rickards, William L. "Ecology and Growth of Juvenile Tarpon, Megalops atlanticus, in a Georgia Salt Marsh." Institute of Marine Sciences, University of Miami. 1968.
  13. ^ Nursery Habitat Characteristics of Juvenile Tarpon, Megalops atlanticus, in the northern Indian River Lagoon, FL
  14. ^ Body size and the air-breathing organ of the Atlantic tarpon Megalops atlanticus
  15. ^ Daniels, C., et al. "The Origin and Evolution of the Surfactant System in Fish: Insights into the Evolution of Lungs and Swim Bladders." Physiological and Biochemical Zoology. 2004.
  16. ^ Monte Burke, Lords of the Fly: Madness, Obsession, and the Hunt for the World-Record Tarpon (Pegasus, 2020) pp. 77, 165.
  17. ^ "Tarpon (Megalops atlanticus)." www.tpwd.state.tx.us. 2 June 2009.
  18. ^ Conner, Mike. "Urban Tarpon on Fly". saltwatersportsman.com. Saltwater Sportsman. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  19. ^ "The Panama Canal as a Passageway for Fishes, with Lists and Remarks on the Fishes and Invertebrates Observed" by Samuel F. Hildebrand (1939)

External links edit

  • Bonefish and Tarpon Trust
  • Save the Tarpon 12 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Tarpon Geographical Distribution and Migration 15 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine

tarpon, other, uses, disambiguation, fish, genus, megalops, they, only, members, family, megalopidae, species, atlanticus, native, atlantic, other, cyprinoides, indo, pacific, oceans, temporal, range, albian, present, preꞒ, atlantic, tarponscientific, classifi. For other uses see Tarpon disambiguation Tarpon are fish of the genus Megalops They are the only members of the family Megalopidae Of the two species one M atlanticus is native to the Atlantic and the other M cyprinoides to the Indo Pacific Oceans TarponTemporal range Albian present PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N 1 2 Atlantic tarponScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ActinopterygiiSuperorder ElopomorphaOrder ElopiformesFamily MegalopidaeD S Jordan 1923Genus MegalopsValenciennes 1847SpeciesM atlanticus Valenciennes 1847 M cyprinoides Broussonet 1782 M priscus Woodward 1901 M oblongus Woodward 1901 M vigilax Jordan 1927 Synonyms 3 Amia Browne 1756 ex Browne 1789 non Gronow 1763 ex Gray 1854 non Meuschen 1781 non Linnaeus 1766 Brisbania de Castelnau 1878 Cyprinodon Hamilton 1822 non Lacepede 1803 Oculeus Commerson ex Lacepede 1803 Tarpon Jordan amp Evermann 1896 Contents 1 Species and habitats 1 1 Fossil species 2 Physical characteristics 2 1 Reproduction and lifecycle 2 2 Diet 2 3 Predation 2 4 Swim bladder 3 Megalops and humans 4 Geographical distribution and migration 5 References 6 External linksSpecies and habitats editThe two species of tarpon are M atlanticus Atlantic tarpon and M cyprinoides Indo Pacific tarpon M atlanticus is found on the western Atlantic coast from Virginia to Brazil throughout the Caribbean and the coast of the Gulf of Mexico Tarpon are also found along the eastern Atlantic coast from Senegal to South Angola 4 M cyprinoides is found along the eastern African coast throughout Southeast Asia Japan Tahiti and Australia Both species are found in marine and freshwater habitats usually ascending rivers to access freshwater marshes 5 They are able to survive in brackish water waters of varying pH and habitats with low dissolved O2 content due to their swim bladders which they use primarily to breathe They can also rise to the surface and take gulps of air giving them a short burst of energy The habitats of tarpon vary greatly with their developmental stages Stage one larvae are usually found in clear warm oceanic waters relatively close to the surface Stage two and three larvae are found in salt marshes tidal pools creeks and rivers Their habitats are characteristically warm shallow dark bodies of water with sandy mud bottoms Tarpon commonly ascend rivers into fresh water As they progress from the juvenile stage to adulthood they return to the ocean s open waters though many remain in freshwater habitats 6 7 Fossil species edit nbsp Selmasaurus a mosasaur hunting a prehistoric tarponFossils of this genus go back to the Cretaceous during the Albian stage 113 0 million years ago Mya 8 9 M priscus Woodward 1901 A species from the Ypresian stage of the Eocene 56 47 Mya M oblongus Woodward 1901 A species also from the Ypresian stage of the Eocene 56 47 Mya It lived in England along with M priscus M vigilax Jordan 1927 A fossil species from California dating to the Miocene 10 Physical characteristics editTarpon grow to about 4 8 ft 1 2 2 4 m long and weigh 60 280 lb 27 127 kg They have dorsal and anal soft rays and bluish or greenish backs Tarpons possess shiny silvery scales that cover most of their bodies excluding the head They have large eyes with adipose eyelids and broad mouths with prominent lower jaws that jut out farther than the rest of the face 4 5 6 Reproduction and lifecycle edit Tarpon breed offshore in warm isolated areas Females have high fecundity and can lay up to 12 million eggs at once They reach sexual maturity once they are about 75 125 cm 30 50 in in length Spawning usually occurs in late spring to early summer 6 Their three distinct levels of development usually occur in varying habitats Stage one or the leptocephalus stage is completed after 20 30 days It occurs in clear warm oceanic waters usually within 10 20 m of the surface The leptocephalus shrinks as it develops into a larva the most shrunken larva stage two develops by day 70 This is due to a negative growth phase followed by a sluggish growth phase By day 70 the juvenile growth phase stage three begins and the fish grows rapidly until sexual maturity 4 11 Diet edit Stage one developing tarpon do not forage for food but instead absorb nutrients from seawater using integumentary absorption Stage two and three juveniles feed primarily on zooplankton insects and small fish As they progress in juvenile development especially those developing in freshwater environments their consumption of insects fish crabs and grass shrimp increases Adults are strictly carnivorous and feed on midwater prey they hunt nocturnally and swallow their food whole 6 7 Predation edit The main predators of Megalops during stage one and early stage two development are other fish depending on their size Juveniles are subject to predation by other juvenile Megalops and piscivorous birds They are especially vulnerable to birds such as ospreys or other raptors when they come to the surface for air due to the rolling manner in which they move to take in air as well as the silver scales lining their sides 12 Adults occasionally fall prey to sharks porpoises crocodiles and alligators Swim bladder edit nbsp Tarpon swimmingOne of the unique features ofMegalops is the swim bladder which in addition to controlling the buoyancy can be used as an accessory respiratory organ It arises dorsally from the posterior pharynx and the respiratory surface is coated with blood capillaries with a thin epithelium over the top This is the basis of the alveolar tissue found in the swim bladder and is believed to be one of the primary methods by which Megalops breathes This trait is essential due to the mangrove and marsh ecosystems the fish use as nursery habitats which often have stagnant waters low in oxygen The juveniles therefore face fewer competitors and predators but need to breathe atmospheric oxygen to survive 13 The ability to breathe air is retained in the adults Even if they live in more oxygenated marine coastal habitats they have high rates of aerobic metabolism and also occasionally occur in hypoxic waters 14 These fish are obligate air breathers and will die without sufficient access to the surface Gas exchange occurs at the surface through a rolling motion commonly associated with tarpon sightings This breathing is believed to be mediated by visual cues and the frequency of breathing is inversely correlated to the dissolved O2 content of the water in which they live 6 15 Megalops and humans edit nbsp A speared tarpon leaps from the water in an 1894 illustration by Hermann Simon Tarpon are considered some of the greatest saltwater game fishes prized not only because of their great size but also because of their fight and spectacular leaping ability After the International Game Fish Association took responsibility for fly fishing records in salt water 1978 fly fishing for tarpon became increasingly popular despite declining populations correlated with the decline of freshwater rivers flowing into the seas around Florida 16 Tarpon meat is not desirable so most are released after being caught citation needed Numerous tournaments are focused on catching tarpon 17 The Atlantic tarpon adapts well to water bodies in urban and suburban environments due to their tolerance for boat traffic and low water quality Around humans Atlantic tarpon are primarily nocturnal 18 Geographical distribution and migration editSince tarpon are not commercially valuable as a food fish very little has been documented concerning their geographical distribution and migrations They inhabit both sides of the Atlantic Ocean and their range in the eastern Atlantic has been reliably established from Senegal to the Congo Tarpon inhabiting the western Atlantic are principally found to populate warmer coastal waters primarily in the Caribbean Gulf of Mexico Florida and the West Indies Nonetheless tarpon are regularly caught by anglers at Cape Hatteras and as far north as Nova Scotia Bermuda and south to Argentina Scientific studies 19 indicate that schools of tarpon have routinely migrated through the Panama Canal from the Atlantic to the Pacific and back for over 70 years However they have not been found to breed in the Pacific Ocean Nevertheless anecdotal evidence from tarpon fishing guides and anglers would tend to validate this notion as over the last 60 years many small juvenile tarpon as well as mature giants have been caught and documented principally on the Pacific side of Panama at the Bayano River the Gulf of San Miguel and its tributaries Coiba Island in the Gulf of Chiriqui and Pinas Bay in the Gulf of Panama Since tarpon tolerate wide ranges of salinity throughout their lives and eat almost anything dead or alive their migrations seemingly are only limited by water temperatures citation needed Tarpon prefer water temperatures of 72 to 82 F 22 to 28 C below 60 F 16 C they become inactive and temperatures under 40 F 4 C can be lethal citation needed References edit Sepkoski Jack 2002 A compendium of fossil marine animal genera Bulletins of American Paleontology 364 560 Retrieved 8 January 2008 Megalops Lacepede 1803 ray finned fish PBDB Part 7 Vertebrates Collection of genus group names in a systematic arrangement Archived from the original on 5 October 2016 Retrieved 30 June 2016 a b c Megalops atlanticus www fishbase org 11 February 2010 a b Megalops cyprinoides www fishbase org 11 February 2010 a b c d e Zale Alexander and Merrifield Susan G Life History and Environmental Requirements of Coastal Fishes and Invertebrates U S Fish and Wildlife Services 1989 a b Wade Richard Archer Ecology of Juvenile Tarpon and Effects of Dieldrin on Two Associated Species Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife 1969 Megalops Tarpon Information Fossil Guy Martin Medrano L Garcia Barrera P 2006 Fossil Ophiuroids of Mexico In F J Vega T G Nybor M D C Perrillat M Montellano Ballesteros S R S Cevallos Ferriz S A Quiroz Barroso eds Studies on Mexican Paleontology Topics in Geobiology Vol 24 pp 115 131 David Lore Rose 16 January 1943 Miocene Fishes of South Carolina Special Papers Vol 43 The Geological Society of America p 120 ISBN 9780813720432 Tsukamoto Y Okiyama M Metamorphosis of the Pacific Tarpon Megalops Cyprinoides Elopiformes Megalopidae with Remarks on Development Patterns in the Elopomorpha Bulletin of Marine Science 1997 Rickards William L Ecology and Growth of Juvenile Tarpon Megalops atlanticus in a Georgia Salt Marsh Institute of Marine Sciences University of Miami 1968 Nursery Habitat Characteristics of Juvenile Tarpon Megalops atlanticus in the northern Indian River Lagoon FL Body size and the air breathing organ of the Atlantic tarpon Megalops atlanticus Daniels C et al The Origin and Evolution of the Surfactant System in Fish Insights into the Evolution of Lungs and Swim Bladders Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 2004 Monte Burke Lords of the Fly Madness Obsession and the Hunt for the World Record Tarpon Pegasus 2020 pp 77 165 Tarpon Megalops atlanticus www tpwd state tx us 2 June 2009 Conner Mike Urban Tarpon on Fly saltwatersportsman com Saltwater Sportsman Retrieved 8 December 2020 The Panama Canal as a Passageway for Fishes with Lists and Remarks on the Fishes and Invertebrates Observed by Samuel F Hildebrand 1939 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Megalopidae Bonefish and Tarpon Trust Save the Tarpon Archived 12 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine Tarpon Geographical Distribution and Migration Archived 15 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tarpon amp oldid 1193771947, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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