Trait completeness | 26% |
Total data | 33 |
References | 14 |
Author: Fabrice Téletchéa
License: All rights reserved
Trait id | Trait | Primary data | Secondary Data | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Oocyte diameter | 0.65 | 0.65 mm | Neumann and Murphy, 1992 |
4 | Egg adhesiveness | Adhesive | Adhesive | Hansen, 1965 |
4 | Egg adhesiveness | Adhesive | Adhesive | Siefert, 1968 |
7 | Degree-days for incubation | 14.4; 3.88 | 55.87 °C * day | Siefert, 1968 |
7 | Degree-days for incubation | 18.3-19.4; 1.8-2.1 | 36.76 °C * day | Siefert, 1968 |
7 | Degree-days for incubation | 22.8; 1.75 | 39.9 °C * day | Siefert, 1968 |
3 | Egg Buoyancy | Demersal | Demersal | Hansen, 1965 |
1 | Oocyte diameter | 0.58-1.02 : "Coalescence of yolkglobules (Mature ova).0.58- 1.02 mm." | 0.8 mm | Thomas and Kilambi, 1981 |
2 | Egg size after water-hardening | My measurements of mature egg diameters (0.82 to 0.92, average 0.89 mm )" | 0.89 mm | Whiteside, 1964 |
2 | Egg size after water-hardening | To estimate fecundity, the right lobe was weighed (nearest 0.01 g) and then preserved in 5% buffered formalin (Bunnell et al., 2005). Briefly, vitellogenic (i.e. fully yolked, 0.40-1.0 mm diameter) eggs in each of three 4 mm diameter cores were counted. | 0.7 mm | Bunnell et al, 2007 |
3 | Egg Buoyancy | ariadnophilic (deposit adhesive eggs within nests) | No category | Stewart et al, 2016 |
4 | Egg adhesiveness | The female often engages in similar nest cleaning behaviors just before spawning and after egg deposition. Substrate at the nest site appears less important to the male than being near some protective cover or bottom vegetation. Nests are located on sod clumps, clay, gravel, rock piles, hollows made among aquatic plants, filamentous algae, or roots as well as the surfaces of boulders; rootwads and submerged brush or trees. | Adhesive | Cooke and Philipp, 2009 |
4 | Egg adhesiveness | ariadnophilic (deposit adhesive eggs within nests) | Adhesive | Stewart et al, 2016 |
5 | Incubation time | Water temperature was maintained at 20°C in a climate-controlled room on a 14L : 10D cycle. One or more adult pairs spawned during their first night in captivity. Adults were kept with the eggs for two days to allow paternal fanning of the embryos. Embryos hatched 2-3 days after fertilization. | 50.0 days | Browman and O'Brien, 1992 |
5 | Incubation time | In an indoor hatchery setting at 18-21° C, hatching has been observed approximately 72hrs post-spawning. | 19.5 days | Culpepper, 2015 |
5 | Incubation time | Adults of both species spawn for 6–8 weeks during late spring through early summer, exhibiting similar reproductive strategies as males build nests in the littoral zone (0.2- to 0.8-m depth) and then provide nest defence to incubating eggs (2–4 days) and embryos (i.e., yolk-sac larvae, 2-6 days). | 4.0 days | Bunnell et al, 2003 |
5 | Incubation time | The incubation times for white crappies were shorter than those for smallmouth bass (1.9 versus 6.0 d for eggs and 4.9 versus 6.0 d for embryos at 18°C). | 1.9 days | Clark et al, 2008 |
6 | Temperature for incubation | Water temperature was maintained at 20°C in a climate-controlled room on a 14L : 10D cycle. | 20.0 °C | Browman and O'Brien, 1992 |
6 | Temperature for incubation | Spawning begins in March in the southern U.S. when water temperature reaches 13-14° C, with peak spawning occurring at 16-20° C. | 13.5 °C | Culpepper, 2015 |
7 | Degree-days for incubation | Egg incubation time (d) = 1.87 + 3.6*10^6 e-T | 1.87 °C * day | Clark et al, 2008 |
Trait id | Trait | Primary Data | Secondary Data | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
8 | Initial larval size | White crappie are approximately 3-4 mm in lenght at hatching and groxth in the first several days is rapid. | 3.5 mm | Browman and O'Brien, 1992 |
8 | Initial larval size | In a compilation by Auer (1982) of 99 freshwater species (including 22 families) native to the Great Lakes basin, mean length at hatch was 6.24 mm; white crappie was the smallest species | 6.24 mm | Bunnell et al, 2003 |
9 | Larvae behaviour | Zooplanktivorous juveniles of the white crappie, Pomoxis annularis, are saltatory searchers; they search briefly while stationary and, if they do not locate a prey, swim a short distance before stopping to scan again. In this paper, we report on the development of foraging behavior in white crappie larvae, compare it to the search strategy of juveniles. | Pelagic | Browman and O'Brien, 1992 |
9 | Larvae behaviour | Estimates of visual acuity in a pelagic freshwater zooplanktivorous fish, the white crappie (Pomoxis annularis, Centrarchidae). | Pelagic | Browman et al, 1990 |
11 | Temperature during larval development | the critical thermal maxima of white crappie to be 32.5° C, while the critical thermal maxima of black crappie was 35° C. Optimum performance and growth occurs at 23.5° C for white crappie. | 32.5 °C | Culpepper, 2015 |
11 | Temperature during larval development | Rather, osmoregulatory failure may have occurred during exposure to temperatures colder than 4°C for at least 1 week. Thus, the availability of warm (≥4°C), oxygenated water during winter may be critical to the survival of age-0 white crappies. In the northern portion of their range, winter temperatures may account for some of the recruitment variability common to white crappie populations. | 4.0 °C | McCollum et al, 2003 |
12 | Sibling intracohort cannibalism | However, most hatchery practices do not attempt to grow-out crappie beyond the post-larval stage due to factors associated with cannibalism. | Cannibalism | Culpepper, 2015 |
12 | Sibling intracohort cannibalism | Potential predators of larvae are numerous, including earlier-hatched larvae, such as cannibalistic Pomoxis spp. larvae, or limnetic walleye and yellow perch, as well as otherlimnetic adults such as white crappie. | Cannibalism | Bunnell et al, 2003 |
13 | Full yolk-sac resorption | Adults of both species spawn for 6–8 weeks during late spring through early summer, exhibiting similar reproductive strategies as males build nests in the littoral zone (0.2- to 0.8-m depth) and then provide nest defence to incubating eggs (2–4 days) and embryos (i.e., yolk-sac larvae, 2-6 days) | 112.0 °C * day | Bunnell et al, 2003 |
13 | Full yolk-sac resorption | The incubation times for white crappies were shorter than those for smallmouth bass (1.9 versus 6.0 d for eggs and 4.9 versus 6.0 d for embryos at 18°C). | 88.0 °C * day | Clark et al, 2008 |
13 | Full yolk-sac resorption | Water temperatures at spawning ranged from 14 to 23 C. The average time between start of hatching and departure of broods from the nests was 95 hr (range, 51 to 162 hr). Larvae absorbed the yolk sac when 4.5 to 4.6 mm long | 1757.0 °C * day | Siefert, 1968 |
14 | Onset of exogeneous feeding | prey items were first observed in the gut on 9 day after hatching. | 180.0 °C * day | Browman and O'Brien, 1992 |
14 | Onset of exogeneous feeding | Growth of first-feeding larvae (<10 days old) increased with total zooplankton biomass (r2 = 0.64). | 10.0 °C * day | Bunnell et al, 2003 |