Anguilla rostrata (Lesueur 1817)

Smith-Vaniz, William F. & Jelks, Howard L., 2014, Marine and inland fishes of St. Croix, U. S. Virgin Islands: an annotated checklist, Zootaxa 3803 (1), pp. 1-120 : 22

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3803.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B22B642B-9987-41AB-8792-0F35D2EAD945

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/02638790-0D6A-FFB8-FF31-3056FD48F8DC

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Anguilla rostrata (Lesueur 1817)
status

 

Anguilla rostrata (Lesueur 1817) View in CoL — American Eel

Justification: UF 183031 (1, 1120 mm TL), freshwater pond, Lower Love Estate , October 1972; USNM 106638 (1, 260 mm TL), Fairplain Stream, H. A. Beatty, 1937; additional St. Croix specimens [not examined] at ZMUC .

Distribution: Smith (1989a) WA (BD, FL, GOM, BA, GA, VI, LA, WC, nSA).

Remarks: Under the name Anguilla bostonensis, Beatty (1944:178) stated "during the winter months the larval eel, which is about two inches in length, can be seen migrating upstream in Fairplain, Concordia and Caledonia streams." In a chapter titled "The Night of the Eel," Seaman (1973) described his excitement as a boy when fishing for eels at Castle Burk pool.

This catadromous and mostly nocturnal eel has a remarkable life history, see Smith (1989a) for a detailed description. It spends the majority of its adult life in fresh water as a "yellow eel," which can last 4‒20 years. At the end of that stage it stops feeding and begins an irreversible transformation (more pronounced in males) that leads to sexual maturation. It then moves out to sea and migrates to an imprecisely known area south of Bermuda where spawning occurs.

MORINGUIDAE —spaghetti eels (1 species)

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