Carassius auratus grandoculis

Carassius auratus grandoculis
nigorobuna carp of Lake Biwa
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Cypriniformes
Family: Cyprinidae
Genus: Carassius
Species: C. auratus
Subspecies: C. a. grandoculis
Trinomial name
Carassius auratus grandoculis
Temminck & Schlegel, 1846[1]

Carassius auratus grandoculis (Japanese: nigoro-buna), a freshwater ray-finned fish, is a wild subspecies of goldfish endemic to Japan; its habitat is limited to Lake Biwa, its tributaries and distributaries, and irrigation canals.

In some literature, it is misleadingly referred to as a "crucian carp," which is not strictly incorrect since this common name is popularly applied to the whole genus Carassius, in addition to being applied to the type species, C. carassius. However, the term "crucian carp" is not applied to C. auratus grandoculis, as it is a subspecies of goldfish, C. auratus.

Etymology

The Japanese name nigorobuna (ニゴロブナ) is ascribed various etymologies. One theory has it that it earned the name ni-gorō-buna (似五郎鮒) meaning "resembling (gen)gorō-buna", because once it reaches sizes of 1 ft or over, it begins to look confusingly similar to the gengorō-buna (源五郎鮒), C. cuvieri, the wild form of the Japanese crucian carp, a closely related species also endemic to the lake.[2] It is alternatively styled 煮頃鮒, which crudely translates to "braising-timely-carp."

Morphology

A typical adult of C. auratus grandoculis attains 35 cm (14 in)[3][4] total length at maturity. Its shape resembles the nagabuna or Carassius auratus ssp. 1 (ナガブナ)[5] that populate Lake Suwa; its body depth is short, and breadth is wide.[6] The head is large, with a ventricular contour that is characteristically ridged.[6] The mouth slit is slanted upwards.[6] Around 61 (or 52–72) gill rakers can be counted, and the dorsal fin rays consist of one spine and 17 (or 15 to 18) soft rays. The anal fin has one spine and five soft rays.[6] The basal length of the dorsal fin is rather long.[6] The total length is 2.7x[6] the body depth.

Behavior

Young larvae and juveniles are found on the surface and medium depths entrenched within the reed growths[6] around the lake, in other words, inlets rich in aquatic plants.[7] Adults occupy shallower waters in summer, and move to deeper waters during the cold winter.

One study (Hirai 1969) showed that when larvae of about 1 cm length were compared, nigorbuna was "scarce(ly)" feeding on algae, compared with local genogoro-buna, which had 25–50% algal digestive tract content by bulk. The fish also showed a preference for certain water fleas over another, relying heavily on Chydorus spp. ( Data related to Chydorus at Wikispecies) and to a lesser extent on Mesocyclops. By contrast, the gengoro-buna kept in the same enclosure preferred wheel animals (rotifer spp.). The fry (larvae) of both species largely ignored other types of zooplankton (such as Alona, Scapholeberis, and copepodid larvae) which were plentiful.[8] As they grow into juveniles exceeding 1 cm, the nigorobuna begin exhibiting behavior of pecking at aquatic plants to feed on attached algae, so by the time they attain 2 cm lengths,[6] algae (and rotifers, small percentage) account for half their diet.[9] When they grow larger, they capture somewhat bottom-dwelling zooplankton.[6]

Adults spawn from April to June, laying eggs on aquatic plants when water levels rise due to rainy season.[6] The hatchlings live by the reedy shore, and move offshore as they grow, reaching full size in 2 to 3 years.[10]

Uses

Funa-zushi made from "nigoro crucian carp": Females carrying roe (pictured) are especially prized.

This is a highly prized fish commercially, made into authentic funazushi, salted and fermented in rice. It is a local delicacy of Shiga Prefecture. The dish is one of the surviving relics of traditional fermented sushi known as narezushi.

This species is said to make superior funazushi that is tender down to the bones, in contrast to imitations now being made by substituting the aforementioned gengoro-buna, Carassius cuvieri.[11] The ginbuna (Carassius auratus langsdorfii is also said to be used as a substitute.

Fishing regulations

Annual catch estimated to be 500 tons in 1965 fell to 178 tons by 1989, and drastically down to 18 tons by 1997,[10] so that efforts were begun to release fishery-raised spawn into nearby rice paddies connected with the water system.[10] Nowadays, the species is also farmed in Saitama Prefecture.[12]

Shiga Prefecture, in its announced project to recover the fish stock, promulgated regulatory rules through its Lake Biwa Fisheries Management Commission, effective April 1, 2007, prohibiting the capture of fish measuring 22 cm or less.[13]

The devastation of numbers is blamed on habitat loss, as well as introduction of nuisance alien species such as black bass and bluegill into the Lake Biwa system.

References

  1. Froese, Rainer and Pauly, Daniel, eds. (2006). "Carassius auratus+grandoculis" in FishBase. April 2006 version.
  2. Hitomi, Hitsudai, d. 1701 (1981), Yoshii, Hatusko; Shimada, Isao, eds., 本朝食鑑(Honchō shokkan) (snippet), 5, Heibonsha, p. 267, ASIN B000J80JPO又此魚ノ大ナルモノ、一尺二三寸位ナルモノハ源五郎鮒二似タリテ、故ニ似五郎ト呼ブト云フ説ヲ優レリトス
  3. Froese, Rainer and Pauly, Daniel, eds. (1985). "Carassius cuvieri" in FishBase. 1985 version.
  4. Gomei & Furukawa 2005Shokuzai kenko daijiten",p.303 gives 35-40cm (13¾-15¾ inches)
  5. The MOE Red databook guves "subspecies 1", which conflicts with Fishbase, which gives subspecies C. a. buergeri
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 NIES 2012(website) citing 川那部 2002 (Ninon no tansuigyo = fresh water fishes of japan)
  7. Hirai 1969
  8. Hirai 1969, p. 124, Tables 1
  9. Hirai 1969, p. 124, Tables 2
  10. 1 2 3 Fisheries Management Division 2007
  11. Gomei & Furukawa 2005, p.303
  12. Kuzushima, Kazumi (葛島一美); Kumagai, Masahiro (熊谷正裕) (2011). [tp://books.google.co.jp/books?id=0RfbNoaKDvIC&pg=PA40 日本タナゴ釣り紀行] (preview). Tsuribito-sha. ISBN 9784885361883., p.40
  13. Lake Biwa Fisheries Management Commission 2007

Further reading

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