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You are viewing an archived site. The Chesapeake Bay Introduced Species Database project ended in 2020 and the database is no longer receiving updates. Learn more…
Image of Lepomis megalotis

Lepomis megalotis

Fishes

Longear Sunfish

Longear Sunfish are small (~8 inches) freshwater fish that are native to much of the Northern and Central United States including the St. Lawrence-Great Lakes, Mississippi basins, and the Gulf slope from Florida to the Rio Grande. These sunfish are not game fish, so its introduction outside its native range was likely incidental to the introduction of larger fishes or as a released aquarium fish. It was first collected in the Chesapeake Region in a tributary to the Potomac River 1953, since then it has become widespread in upper Potomac drainage and the Gunpowder River system. They are fairly rare and so their impacts are not well understood, but they probably compete for food with other Sunfish such as Redbreast Sunfish (Lepomis auritus). They been known to hybridize with the native Pumpkinseed (L. gibbosus).

Image Credit: Wiki Commons

Taxonomy Invasion History Ecology Impacts References

Description


Taxonomy

Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus
Animalia Chordata Osteichthyes Perciformes Centrarchidae Lepomis

Synonyms

Invasion History

Chesapeake Bay Status

First Record Population Range Introduction Residency Source Region Native Region Vectors
1971 Established Stable Introduced Regular Resident North America North America Fisheries(Fisheries Accidental),Ornamental(Pet Release)

History of Spread

Lepomis megalotis (Longear Sunfish) is native to the St. Lawrence-Great Lakes; Hudson Bay (limited) and Mississippi basins; Quebec to MN; south to FL panhandle and south TX; on the Gulf slope from FL to the Rio Grande (Jenkins and Burkhead 1993; Lee et al. 1980; Page and Burr 1991). This small sunfish has had a few scattered introductions in river systems in 8 states (Lee et al. 1980; Fuller et al. 1999). It may have been introduced as a contaminant with larger fishes, or as a released aquarium fish.

In the Chesapeake basin, Lepomis megalotis has been introduced primarily in the Potomac drainage (Jenkins and Burkhead 1993; Lee et al. 1976; Lee et al. 1981), but there is at least one record in an upper Bay drainage as well.

Potomac River- Lepomis megalotis was first collected in the Potomac drainage in WV in 1953, and was collected in Coastal Plain nontidal tributaries by 1970-71 (O'Dell et al. 1976). It was widespread in upper Potomac drainage (MD-WV) by 1978 (Stauffer et al. 1978a; Stauffer et al. 1978b). It was caught by Killgore et al. (1989) in tidal fresh water, where it was apparently rare, and was found in Port Tobacco Creek and Wicomico River in tidal and nontidal waters (Lippson et al. 1979); and in nontidal streams at Fort Belvoir VA (Ernst et al.1995).

Upper Bay tributaries- An L. megalotis was collected in nontidal waters of the Gunpowder River system in 1996 (Boward et al. 1997b).

Delaware Estuary- Lepomis megalotis were collected in the Delaware river drainage in Bucks County PA in 1923 (Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 2014), and in the upper, lower and middle regions of the NJ-PA portion of the estuary in 1986 and 1988 (Weisberg et al. 1996).

History References - Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 1998; Boward et al. 1997b; Ernst et al. 1995; Fuller et al. 1999; Killgore et al. 1989; Lee et al. 1976; Lee et al. 1980; Lee et al. 1981; Lippson et al. 1979; O'Dell et al. 1976; Page and Burr 1991; Stauffer et al. 1978a; Stauffer et al. 1978b; Weisberg et al. 1996

Invasion Comments

Ecology

Environmental Tolerances

For SurvivalFor Reproduction
Minimum Maximum Minimum Maximum
Temperature (ºC) 37.8 20.0 30.0
Salinity (‰) 0.0 7.0 0.0 0.0
Oxygen hypoxic
pH
Salinity Range fresh-oligo

Age and Growth

Male Female
Minimum Adult Size (mm) 75.0 75.0
Typical Adult Size (mm) 108.0 108.0
Maximum Adult Size (mm) 203.0 203.0
Maximum Longevity (yrs) 6.0 6.0
Typical Longevity (yrs 3.0 3.0

Reproduction

Start Peak End
Reproductive Season
Typical Number of Young
Per Reproductive Event
Sexuality Mode(s)
Mode(s) of Asexual
Reproduction
Fertilization Type(s)
More than One Reproduction
Event per Year
Reproductive Startegy
Egg/Seed Form

Impacts

Economic Impacts in Chesapeake Bay

Lepomis megalotis (Longear Sunfish) is apparently too small (Carlander 1977) and uncommon to serve as a common gamefish, and too rare to have other significant fisheries impacts in tidal Chesapeake waters (Jenkins and Burkhead 1993; Killgore et al. 1989).

References- Carlander 1977; Jenkins and Burkhead 1993; Killgore et al. 1989


Economic Impacts Outside of Chesapeake Bay

Lepomis megalotis (Longear Sunfish) is of the prettiest sunfishes (Jenkins and Burkhead 1993), but sport fisheries are limited by its small size (Carlander 1977). It has only been sporadically introduced (Page and Burr 1991), to drainages in 8 states (Fuller et al. 1999).

References. - Carlander 1977; (Fuller et al. 1999; Jenkins and Burkhead 1993; Page and Burr 1991


Ecological Impacts on Chesapeake Native Species

Effects of Lepomis megalotis (Longear Sunfish) introduction on abundance of native biota in Chesapeake Bay are not known. Impacts are probably limited by low abundance in tidal waters.

Hybridization- Lepomis megalotis hybridizes with L. gibbosus (Pumpkinseed) (Jenkins and Burkhead 1993).

Competition- In southern MI, some food overlap occurs between L. gibbosus and L. megalotis, especially in spring, but L. gibbosus ate more snails and L. megalotis ate more large insect larvae. L. megalotis preferred sparsely vegetated areas while L. gibbosus preferred dense vegetation (Laughlin and Werner 1980).

Lepomis megalotis' food spectrum overlaps with that of L. auritus (Redbreast Sunfish) (Jenkins and Burkhead 1993). In AL streams, the two species were spatially separated by the Fall Line (L. auritis in the Piedmont; L. megalotis in the Coastal Plain); but their food habits overlapped considerably. Competition was suggested as a possible reason for this spatial segregation (Cooner and Bayne 1982).

References- Cooner and Bayne 1982; Laughlin and Werner 1980; Jenkins and Burkhead 1993


Ecological Impacts on Other Chesapeake Non-Native Species

Impacts of Lepomis megalotis (Longear Sunfish) are probably limited by low abundance of this species in tidal waters.

Hybridization- Lepomis megalotis hybridizes with Lepomis cyanellus (Green sunfish) and Lepomis macrochirus (Bluegill) (Jenkins and Burkhead 1993).

Competition- Some food overlap with other introduced Lepomis spp. is likely, especially with the omnivorous L. macrochirus, and possibly L. microlophus (Redear Sunfish) (Carlander 1977; Jenkins and Burkhead 1993). Lepomis microlophus is regarded as a mollusc specialist (Carlander 1977), but L. megalotis was found to feed on Corbicula fluminea in Lake Fairfield TX. (McCrady 1990).

Food- Lepomis megalotis is a likely prey of Micropterus salmoides (Largemouth Bass) and other large predatory fishes.

Predation- Lepomis megalotis was found to feed on Corbicula fluminea (Asian Freshwater Clam) in Lake Fairfield TX. (McCrady 1990).

Refs. - Carlander 1977; Jenkins and Burkhead 1993; McCrady 1990


References

1998 Ichthyological Collection Catalog. gopher://fowler.acnatsci.org:71

Bean, Tarleton H. (1883) Notes on fishes observed at the head of Chesapeake Bay in the spring of 1882 and upon other species of rhe same region., Proceedings of the United States National Museum 6: 365-367

Boward, Daniel M.; Dail, Helen M.; Kazyak, Paul F. (1997) Gunpowder River Basin: Environmental Assessment of Stream Conditions, In: (Eds.) . , Annapolis. Pp.

Carlander, Kenneth D. (1977) Handbook of Freshwater Fishery Biology. , In: (Eds.) Handbook of Freshwater Fishery Biology, Volume Two: Life History Data on Centrarchid Fishes of the U.S & Canada. , Ames. Pp. Ames

Cooner, Robert; Bayne, David R. (1982) Diet overlap in redbreast and longear sunfishes from small streams of east central Alabama, Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Southeast Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies 36: 106-114

Davis, Robert M. (1974) Key to the freshwater fishes of Maryland, , Annapolis, MD. Pp.

Ernst, Carl H.; Wilgenbusch, James C.,; Morgan, Donald L.; Boucher, Timothy P.; Sommerfield, Mark (1995) Fishes of Fort Belvoir, Virginia, Maryland Naturalist 39: 1-60

Fuller, Pam. L.; Nico, Leo; Williams, J. D. (1999) Nonindigenous fishes introduced into inland waters of the United States, , Bethesda MD. Pp.

Hardy, Jerry D., Jr. (1978) Development of fishes of the Mid-Atlantic Bight. Vol. 3. Aphredoderidae through Rachycentridae., In: (Eds.) . , Washington DC. Pp.

Jenkins, Robert E.; Burkhead, Noel M. (1993) Freshwater fishes of Virginia., , Bethesda, MD. Pp.

Killgore, K. Jack; Morgan, Raymond P. II; Rybicki, Nancy B. (1989) Distribution and abundance of fishes associated with submersed aquatic plants in the Potomac River, North American Journal of Fisheries Management 9: 101-111

Laughlin, Dennis R.; Werner, Earl E. (1980) Resource partitioning in two coexisting sunfish: Pumpkinseed (Lepomis gibbosus) and northern longear sunfish (Lepomis megalotis peltastes)., Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 37: 1411-1420

Lee, David S. (1976) Aquatic zoogeography of Maryland, Atlantic Naturalist 31: 147-158

Lee, David S.; Gilbert, Carter R.; Hocutt, Charles H.; Jenkins, Robert E.; McAllister, Don E.; Stauffer, Jay R. (1980) Atlas of North American Freshwater Fishes, , Raleigh. Pp.

Lee, David S.; Platania, S. P.; Gilbert, Carter R.; Franz, Richard; Norden, Arnold (1981) A revised list of the freshwater fishes of Maryland and Delaware, Proceedings of the Southeastern Fishes Council 3: 1-9

Lippson, Alice J.; Haire, Michael S.; Holland, A. Frederick; Jacobs, Fred; Jensen, Jorgen; Moran-Johnson, R. Lynn; Polgar, Tibor T.; Richkus, William (1979) Environmental Atlas of the Potomac Estuary, , Baltimore, MD. Pp.

Lippson, Alice J.; Moran, R. Lynn (1974) Manual for identification of early developmental stages of fishes of the Potomac River estuary., In: (Eds.) . , Baltimore MD. Pp.

McCrady, Ellen Joy (1990) Interactions between the invasive freshwater clam, Corbicula fluminea, and its fish predators in Lake Fairfield, Texas, , Arlington, Texas. Pp.

O'Dell, Jay; Dintaman, R.; Gabor, J. (1976) Fishes of the Potomac River estuary., In: Mason, William Tand Flynn, Kevin C.(Eds.) The Potomac Estuary: Biological Resources - Trends and Options.. , Bethesda, MD. Pp. 100-104

Page, Lawrence M.; Burr, Brooks M. (1991) Freshwater Fishes., , Boston. Pp.

Peterson, Mark S. (1988) Comparative physiological ecology of centrarchids in hyposaline environments, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 45: 827-833

Stauffer, Jay B.; Hocutt, Charles H.; Pistolas, Steve (1978) Preliminary comparison of the ichthyofauna of the northern and southern tributaries of the Potomac River., In: Buterbaugh, Galen L.(Eds.) Proceedings of the 2nd Annual Meeting of the Potomac Chapter of the American Fisheries Society. , Bethesda, MD. Pp. 24-38

Stauffer, Jay R. Jr.; Hocutt, Charles H.; Lee, David S. (1978) The zoogeography of the freshwater fishes of the Potomac River Basin, In: Flynn, Kevin G.; Mason, William T.(Eds.) The Freshwater Potomac: Aquatic Communities and Environmental Stresses. , Rockville, MD. Pp. 44-54

Weisberg, Stephen; Himchak, Peter; Baum, Tom; Wilson, Harold T.; Allen, Russell (1996) Temporal trends in abundance of fish in the tidal Delaware River, Estuaries 19: 723-729


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