ML12188A740

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Fws 1992 Snail Darter Species Account
ML12188A740
Person / Time
Site: Watts Bar Tennessee Valley Authority icon.png
Issue date: 12/22/2009
From:
US Dept of Interior, Fish & Wildlife Service
To:
Watts Bar Special Projects Branch
Poole J
References
Download: ML12188A740 (5)


Text

Species Account SPECIES ACCOUNTS Source: Endangered and Threatened Species of the Southeastern United States (The Red Book) FWS Region 4 -- As of

11/92 SNAIL DARTER (Percina (Imostoma) tanasi)

FAMILY: Percidae

STATUS: On October 9, 1975, this species was officially classified in the Federal Register as endangered. On July 5, 1984,

the snail darter was reclassified to threatened.

DESCRIPTION: The snail darter is a member of the subgenus Imostoma with characteristics most similar to the closely

related stargazing darter (Percina uranida). Distinguishing characteristics of this fish are as

follows: (1) modal number of anal

fin rays 12; (2) pectoral and pelvic fins short and rounded; and, nuptial males with pelvic fin

tubercules confined to the four

median rays. The general body color is variable from brown to olive, sometimes blanched, with a dorsal saddle pattern often

strongly evident. Maximum size is approximately 89 millimeters or 3.5 inches.

REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT: Based on studies conducted in the Little Tennessee River, the spawning

period is estimated to occur from mid-winter through mid-spring, and to take place in the

shallower shoal areas over large,

smooth gravel. Water temperature during this period ranges from 5 to 16 degrees Centigrade.

Multiple spawns are suspected.

Hatching takes place in about 18 to 2O days, with the larvae then drifting with the current to

nursery areas farther downstream.

After a nursery period of 5 to 7 months, the juvenile darters begin to migrate back to the

upstream spawning areas, where they

spend the remainder of the lives. About one-fourth of the darters reach sexual maturity in

their first year, and the remainder

during the second year. The maximum lifespan seems to be 4 years. Food items of larger snail

darters include both aquatic

insects and snails, but the snails form the bulk of the diet. The diet of snail darters below

about 45 millimeters standard length http://www.fws.gov/cookeville/docs/endspec/snldtrsa.html (1 of 5) [12/22/2009 9:57:37 AM]

Species Account has not been studied.

RANGE AND POPULATION LEVEL: The snail darter was discovered August 1973 in the lower Little Tennessee River,

Loudon County, Tennessee, by Dr. David A. Etnier. After further collections and study, Dr.

Etnier published his findings in

January 1976, indicating the snail darter to be a new species of percid fish. Before the

construction of various impoundments,

this fish probably was abundant in the main channel of the Tennessee River and possibly

ranged from the Holston, French

Broad, Lower Clinch, and Hiwassee Rivers, and downstream in the Tennessee drainage to

northern Alabama.

Snail darter Critical Habitat in the Little Tennessee River was completely eliminated in 1979 by the closure of Tellico Dam.

There is some evidence, however, that immediately downstream in the Tennessee River (headwater of Watts Bar Reservoir) a

viable population still remains in the 5- to 1O-mile stretch of riverine habitat below Fort

Loudon Dam. Another population,

quite likely of natural origin, was discovered by Dr. Etnier in November 198O, in South

Chickamauga Creek between creek

mile 5.6 in Tennessee (Hamilton County) and creek mile 19.3 in Georgia (Catoosa County).

Subsequent 1981 and 1982

surveys in the Tennessee River drainage have revealed snail darters in Sewee Creek (Meigs

County), and a few darters have

also been taken from the Tennessee River mainstream just below Chickamauga and Nickajack

Dams, the Sequatchie River (Tennessee), and Paint Rock River (Alabama). The remaining distribution has resulted from

transplants. Since 1975, snail

darters have been transplanted in the following Tennessee Rivers: Hiwassee (Bradley and Polk

Counties); Nolichucky (Cocke/Greene Counties); Holston (Knox County); and Elk (Giles County). The Nolichucky

transplant work was discontinued

early, and there has been no definite evidence of a surviving population. In 1988, snail darters

were found in the French Broad

River upstream from its confluence with the Holston River. The population's status is unknown

but occurences probably stem

from the Holston River transplants.

The population in the Little Tennessee River was variously estimated at 5,OOO to 2O,OOO prior to the onset of detrimental

impacts from the construction of Tellico Dam. Adequate snail darter population estimates in

upper Watts Bar Reservoir (main http://www.fws.gov/cookeville/docs/endspec/snldtrsa.html (2 of 5) [12/22/2009 9:57:37 AM]

Species Account channel Tennessee River below Tellico Dam) have not been made. Snail darters transplanted to the Hiwassee River in 1975

and 1976 had produced an estimated population of 2,5OO by 1979. Darters transplanted to

the Nolichucky River in 1975

apparently did not survive. From December 1978 through November 6, 1979, a total of 1O4

darters from the Hiwassee and

427 from the Little Tennessee were transplanted to the Holston River near Mascot. In July

198O, a total of 425 snail darters,

previously removed from the Tellico project area were stocked into the Elk River. The South

Chickamauga Creek population

is estimated at 2OO to 4OO. The Sewee Creek population has not been accurately assessed, but possibly numbers a few

thousand. The populations in the Paint Rock River and the Sequatchie River are undoubtedly

very small as only a few

specimens have ever been taken.

HABITAT: In the Little Tennessee River, mature snail darters were known only from portions of gravel shoals in the main

channel of the river. Fish were found in the swifter portions of shoals over clean gravel

substrate in cool, low-turbidity water.

The juveniles utilized downstrean nursery sites located in the Tennessee River (Watts Bar

Reservoir headwater). The snail

darters discovered in South Chickamauga Creek in 198O also utilize gravel shoal habitat, but

the stream itself is much smaller,

has lower water quality in some portions, and gets much warmer in the summer. Sewee

Creek, where a substantial snail darter

population was discovered in April 1991, apparently has good overall water quality and habitat

similar to South Chickamauga

Creek. CRITICAL HABITAT: Critical habitat was designated in the Little Tennessee River when the species was listed as

endangered in 1975. After a Federal law was passed exempting the proposed filling of Tellico

Reservoir from Endangered

Species Act protection, the dam destroyed this darter's entire critical habitat area. When the

species was downlisted to

threatened in 1984, the Little Tennessee River was officially removed from Endangered

Species Act protection as snail darter

critical habitat.

REASONS FOR CURRENT STATUS: The Little Tennessee River was the snail darter's only known spawning habitat

when the species was listed as endangered. Although no populations now exist in the Little http://www.fws.gov/cookeville/docs/endspec/snldtrsa.html (3 of 5) [12/22/2009 9:57:37 AM]

Species Account Tennessee River, the proposed and subsequent construction of Telico Dam sparked reintroduction efforts and population surveys.

New populations were either

discovered or started in the main stem Tennessee River and in six of its tributaries. After Dr.

Etnier's discovery of the South

Chickamauga Creek population in November of 198O, and his later find of a single specimen in

the lower Sequatchie River,

the Tennessee Valley Authority and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service initiated new studies in

1981 to better determine the

species' range. This research uncovered the Sewee Creek population and a few darters were

also collected at several other

locations, including the Sequatchie and Paint Rock Rivers. Because several new populations

had either been discovered or

established, the Snail Darter Recovery Team met with Fish and Wildlife Service biologists to

recommend the following actions:

(1) Downlist the species from endangered to threatened; (2) Keep the species on the Federal

list; and (3) Retain requirements

for a Federal permit to collect snail darters if downlisting to threatened occurs. All three

recommendations were adopted, and

the species was downlisted to threatened in July 1984. Recovery team members voted not to

delist the species because the

viability of its populations is still unknown.

MANAGEMENT AND PROTECTION: The Snail Darter Recovery Team recommends that there should be at least five

separate viable populations to eliminate the threat of extinction. The transplant work

conducted to date, along with the other

discovered populations, may be sufficient enough to eventually achieve this objective and

provide a basis for completely

removing the snail darter from the Federal List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife.

REFERENCES:

Etnier, David A. 1976. A New Percid Fish From The Little Tennessee River, Tennessee. 44-Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., Vol.

88:469-488.

Hickman, Gary D., and Richard B. Fitz. 1978. A Report on the Ecology and Conservation of the Snail Darter (Percina tanasi

Etnier) 1975-1977. Tennessee Valley Authority, Norris, Tennessee. 155 pp., app.

Starnes, Wayne C. 1977. The Ecology and Life History of the Endangered Snail Darter, Percina http://www.fws.gov/cookeville/docs/endspec/snldtrsa.html (4 of 5) [12/22/2009 9:57:37 AM]

Species Account (Imostoma) tanasi Etnier).

Ph.D. dissertation. Univ. Tennessee, Knoxville. 144 pp.

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