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FACTSHEETS: September 2024 - no. 339

 Ariopsis felis (Linnaeus, 1766)


his is probably a species that you will not see in home aquaria as it grows to over 2 feet and is more comfortable in saline and brackish coastline waters. The species we are talking about is this months (September 2024) factsheet, the "Hardhead sea catfish", Ariopsis felis from the Ariidae family.

 


Ariopsis felis

   Ariopsis felis

There has been many genus name changes for this species which has spanned most of the species over the years in this family even before Marceniuk et al in 2007 published their paper on the "Systematics of the family Ariidae (Ostariophysi, Siluriformes), with a redefinition of the genera". This paper had A. felis as the now synonym of Sciades felis. At the moment (2024) Ariopsis is the preferred genera of the "Forktail Catfishes" in the Ariinae sub-family and for another 5 species to date namely Ariopsis assimilis (Günther, 1864), Ariopsis canteri Acero P., Betancur-R. & Marceniuk, 2017, Ariopsis guatemalensis (Günther, 1864), Ariopsis jimenezi Marceniuk, Acero P., Cooke & Betancur-R, 2017, and Ariopsis seemanni (Günther, 1864).

 

Ariopsis felis - head view


  Ariopsis felis - head view

 

Ariopsis felis is found in turbid muddy bottoms, along coastlines and in estuaries; brackish to marine, and occasionally in freshwater from North Carolina to Honduras. Both marine (Ariidae) and freshwater catfishes (Ictaluridae) are notable for their unscaled skin, forked caudal fins, adipose fins set anterior to the caudal peduncle, and the presence of large, serrated spines positioned anteriorly to the dorsal fin and the pectoral fins. Marine catfishes are separated from Ictalurids based on the absence of barbels on the nostrils, and by body colour, which is typically steel blue dorsally, fading to silver laterally, and white ventrally.

 

 

Charleston Harbor

 

Distrbution: Southeastern North America: United States and Mexico. Type locality: (for Silurus felis) Charleston Harbor, South Carolina. U.S.A.

 

Some evidence indicates sound production in hardhead catfish is differentiated both mechanistically and contextually. Mechanistically, sound can be produced in different ways. Thin bones by the swim bladder can be vibrated by specialized sonic muscles. Also, grinding of the pharyngeal teeth and rubbing of the pectoral spines against the pectoral girdle can produce sound. These two mechanisms appear to be evolved fright responses by the hardhead catfish. Some argue that hardhead catfish use an unrefined form of sonar as a means of echolocation, which also implies some directional hearing ability. It is possible, but is so far unproven, that sound is used in courtship and spawning (Smith M. E. 2000).

Adult sea catfishes prefer water temperatures between 25-36°C (77-96.8 °F), (Jones et al 1978), and actively avoid waters where temperatures exceed 37°C (99°F). They also tend to avoid water temperatures below 6°C (43 °F) in the winter months by migrating offshore where water temperatures are more stable, returning to inshore areas in the spring. However, Tabb and Manning (1961) reported that catfishes in southern Florida waters remain inshore year-round.


Common Name

Hardhead sea catfish

Synonyms

Silurus felis, Arius milberti, Arius equestris, Galeichthys guentheri, Sciades felis

Family

Ariidae

Subfamily

Ariinae

Distribution

Western Atlantic: Massachusetts south to Florida (U.S.A.), including Gulf of Mexico. Invasive in eastern Mediterranean Sea.

Size

60.0cm (24ins)

Temp.

25-35°c (77-97°f)

p.H.

7.0-8.5.

Characteristics

The hardhead catfish has four barbels under the chin, with two more at the corners of the mouth. The dorsal and pectoral fins each are supported by a sharp, slime-covered, barbed spine. The gafftopsail catfish looks similar to the hardhead catfish, but its dorsal and pectoral spines have a distinctive fleshy extension (like the fore-and-aft topsail of a ship).

Colouration

Dark brown to blue above, shading to whitish below; pelvic fins pale; adipose fin black.

Aquarium Care & Compatibility

Not a species for the home aquarium.

Reproduction

Males incubate eggs in the mouth, so a mouth brooder. It has been proposed that the highly modified pelvic fins may be the site of fertilisation and may play a role in transferring fertilised eggs to the mouth of the male for incubation (Gunter 1947). However, it is also possible that males pick up eggs from shallow depression in sand, as eggs, while adhesive, tend to be demersal.

Sexual differences

Females develop flap-like fatty tissue on their pelvic fins at maturity, and thus have larger pelvic fins than males of the species (Lee 1937; Merriman 1940).

Diet

The barbels help the catfish find crabs, fish, and shrimp in the muddy bays where they live. It consumes a wide range of food. It is an opportunistic consumer that uses mud and sand flats as hunting grounds. It is also mainly a secondary consumer, ingesting primarily detritus, meio-, and macrobenthic fauna, and fish. Its diet primarily consists of algae, sea grasses, cnidarians, sea cucumbers, gastropods, polychaetes, shrimp, and crabs. It can occasionally be a tertiary consumer.

Glossary of Terms

Adipose fin: Fleshy finlike projection without rays, behind the rayed dorsal fin.
Barbels: Whisker-like structure on the heads of most catfish.
Caudal fin: The tail.
Caudal peduncle: The narrow part of a fish's body to which the caudal or tail fin is attached.
Demersal: Sinking to or lying on the bottom; living on or near the bottom and feeding on benthic organisms.
Dorsal fin: The primary rayed fin(s) on top of the body.

Pelvic fins: The paired fins, between the pectorals and the anal fins. (also referred to as ventrals).
Pectoral: The paired fins just behind the head.

Etymology

Ariopsis: Greek, ari = very, strength, superiority + Greek, opsis = appearance.
felis: cat (i.e., catfish), manuscript name coined by Scottish physician-naturalist Alexander Garden (1730-1791), Charleston, South Carolina (USA), who sent fish skins to Linnaeus.

References

Betancur, R. 2015. Ariopsis felis. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2015.
Froese, R. and D. Pauly
. Editors. 2024. FishBase. World Wide Web electronic publication. www.fishbase.org, ( 02/2024 ).
Indian River Lagoon Species Inventory 2024.
Marceniuk, Alexandre P.; Menezes, Naércio A
. (2007). "Systematics of the family Ariidae (Ostariophysi, Siluriformes), with a redefinition of the genera" Zootaxa 1416: 1–126.
Smith, M.E. Alarm Response of Arius felis to Chemical Stimuli from Injured Conspecifics. J Chem Ecol 26, 1635–1647 (2000).
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Shorefishes of the Greater Caribbean online information system.
The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database © Christopher Scharpf.
www.inaturalist.org

IUCN Red List

This widely distributed species is common and abundant where it occurs in shallow coastal and estuarine areas. It frequently occurs as by catch in trawl and saltwater angler, but is purposefully avoided for nuisance reasons. The population appears to have declined along the eastern U.S. seaboard, but the drivers are not yet well understood. Due to its wide distribution and stable population in the Gulf of Mexico, it is not considered to be experiencing significant overall declines. Therefore, it is listed as Least Concern (IUCN 2015).

Photo Credits

© Johnny Jensen @ Johnny Jensen's Photographic Library
Map: Google maps 2024.

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