Alosa immaculata, Bennett, 1835

Freyhof, JÖrg, Yoğurtçuoğlu, Baran, Jouladeh-Roudbar, Arash & Kaya, Cüneyt, 2025, Handbook of Freshwater Fishes of West Asia, De Gruyter : 65

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.1515/9783111677811

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17819544

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C85F87D2-FFE4-FFAF-28AB-FD6AFD74FA6F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Alosa immaculata
status

 

Alosa immaculata View in CoL

Common name. Large Black Sea shad.

Diagnosis. Distinguished from other species of Alosa entering freshwater in Black Sea basin by: ● 36–69 gill rakers, longer than branchial filaments / ○ teeth on palatine and vomer well developed. Size up to 350 mm SL.

Distribution. Black and Azov Seas, from where adults ascend rivers and migrate far upstream to spawn. Presence in Marmara basin questionable. Present in Rioni, but distribution in northern Anatolia poorly known. Used to ascend Danube for about 1600 km to Mohacs ( Hungary), Don for 900 km to Oust-Medveditskaya, Dniepr to Kyiv, Dniester to Yampol, and South Bug to Voznessensks.Reported to spawn in Kuban below Krasnodar dam since 1983. A landlocked population occurs in Don.

Habitat. At sea, pelagic, in deep water. Migrates to middle reaches of large rivers, spawning where current is strongest, near surface, usually at 2–3 m depth in main channel.

Biology. Anadromous, migrating upstream to spawn at three years, rarely earlier. Few individuals spawn two seasons. Appears along coast in March–April, enters rivers when temperatures reach about 6–9°C between late March and late April. Migration usually peaks in May. Spawning begins when temperatures rise above 15°C in April–August. Spawns usually in afternoon (1–8 pm), eggs pelagic. Spent

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Order

Clupeiformes

Family

Clupeidae

Genus

Alosa

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