NANFA Forum Off-Line
I don't know why, but as of now, 7:30 p.m. CST on New Year's Eve, the NANFA Forum is down. Hopefully it will return soon.
News, Views, And General Gossip About Native Fishes Research In Alabama
I don't know why, but as of now, 7:30 p.m. CST on New Year's Eve, the NANFA Forum is down. Hopefully it will return soon.
I heard back from Jera at the Bankhead National Forest today. She's extended my permission to catch fish in Sipsey Fork inside Bankhead until the end of January. Going out next Tuesday still looks good, with little rain between now and then, and predictions of a sunny day with high in the mid-forties. We'll be looking to collect about 20 silverstripe shiners, hopefully that will be relatively easy as long as water levels aren't high. The latter is the bigger problem than temperature, since years ago we tried to collect at this site in February and were driven out by high water. But now we have better gear and more experience, and are maybe tougher and smarter(!), so I'm hoping for the best.
I still haven't heard back from the editor at NeuroReport, which doesn't surprise me this time of year. Things have been slow with me too. But I did spend much of the day today doing more re-ordering of my office. I've broken down my old computer, with CRT, and I'm going with a laptop instead. Along with moving out my old, old printer that only works as a scanner(!), my desk is hugely cleared off which is a good thing. With the laptop as my primary computer, everything is portable; all I need is a wifi system at home for easy access.
I submitted the shiner brains paper to the journal NeuroReport an hour ago. It's already evening in London, where the editorial office is, so I don't expect to hear back from them until next week. Hopefully they'll put it out on review and we'll see what happens. It's much different from what we submitted last June, looking at breeeding season brain volume vs. standard length for each of three species and also at the amount of n-methyl d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors in the brains of individuals of the same three species, all broken down by sex. Only the sexually dimorphic scarlet shiner shows statistically significant male/females differences for both measures.
I've spent much of my time for the last 5 days working on our manuscript, "Sexual Dimorphism in the Teleost Central Nervous System Varies With Spawning Strategy" by Stallsmith et al. It's just about ready to submit to the journal NeuroReport, with our comparisons of brain features between males and females in scarlet (L. fasciolaris), silverstripe (N. stilbius) and telescope (N. telescopus) shiners. I'll let the Abstract explain it broadly:
Here's a somewhat edited version of my submitted report on last week's stream survey. For the moment, if you really want to know where to find the slender campeloma, you'll have to ask me or Jeff Garner.
And that means we're going to Estill Fork this morning for drift netting. We may not catch any fish since I think we're caught up for the moment with various projects. As I'm sure you know, today is also Beethoven's birthday.
We went out on Thursday to survey 2000 stream feet at two sites in Limestone County, Alabama, for rare spring pygmy sunfish and tuscumbia darters. Both of these sites are north of any historic sites for the spring pygmy. We didn't find either species at either of these sites, which turned out to be all wrong in terms of habitat conditions. But both of these streams feed into lower Beaverdam Creek which is the habitat for both species. I'll post more once I submit the final version of my report to the company that requested our survey. One last tease, we found flame chubs at one of the sites, along with stripetail darters which were totally unexpected.
I had late afternoon brainwaves today and yesterday after wrapping up grading and some errands. The inspiration hit me to rework the article on our work with brain size and NMDA receptors in three species of shiner. It's now more streamlined, with only two figures, and better focused in general. Below is the new title and abstract. It's been one of those weird writing events when after worrying about the writing for a month or two(!), two afternoon sessions are enough to make all the moves on the manuscript (most, anyway).
As final exams peak today, I'm treading water for anything interesting for the moment. We go out first thing Thursday to survey streams for spring pygmy sunfish and tuscumbia darters. The weather forecast is for sunny but a high of 44 deg. F which will be brisk. Wearing waders and walking around definitely conserves heat, I just hope we don't get cold hands. But the status of this stream system is a good scientific question with serious ramifications for the continued existence of a species. Will anyone invoke some sort of "god squad" to decide the fate of this species, or just carry on as usual as a species disappears? It's a serious ethical question, unless of course you don't think it is.
I have a paid survey job that we can hopefully do next week. The small area of available habitat for the spring pygmy sunfish is being squeezed by expanding suburban development from the city of Huntsville, AL. This is really just a unique spring system in the eastern edge of Limestone County, now the only home to the spring pygmys. They need just the right water flow conditions of limestone spring runs meandering through a swampy area. This area has been protected, more or less, but now sewer lines are being put in to support expanded suburbs. I've agreed to do a site survey at two creek sites where the sewer pipe is slated to cross the stream. By request of the US Fish & Wildlife Service, we'll be looking for both spring pygmys and tuscumbia darters, another endemic vulnerable species. At each site we'll net and generally look around to see if those species are present. Also present might be flame chubs and (much less likely) slackwater darters, the latter a Federally Threatened species already.