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A new species of Percina (Perciformes: Percidae) from the Apalachicola River drainage, southeastern United States

January 1, 2008

Percina crypta, the Halloween Darter, is described as a new species endemic to the Chattahoochee and Flint River systems in Georgia and Alabama. Percina crypta differs from sympatric Percina nigrofasciata in having narrowly separated dorsal saddles (inter-saddle spaces typically less than or equal to saddle width, compared to frequently wider than saddle width in P. nigrofasciata), in usually possessing a single modified scale between the pelvic bases (compared to two or more in P. nigrofasciata), and in having dark wide bands on pectoral-fin rays (versus pectoral fin clear, or with irregular dark marks or weak tessellations on fin rays in P. nigrofasciata). Phylogenetic relationships of P. crypta to other species of Percina are obscure. Percina crypta occurs in shoal and riffle habitats in the Chattahoochee and Flint River mainstems and in a few tributary systems, with the known extant range comprising four disjunct areas separated by mainstem impoundments and altered river reaches.

Publication Year 2008
Title A new species of Percina (Perciformes: Percidae) from the Apalachicola River drainage, southeastern United States
Authors Mary C. Freeman, B. J. Freeman, N.M. Burkhead, C.A. Straight
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Zootaxa
Index ID 5224921
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center