Rheophile

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A rheophile is an animal that prefers to live in fast-moving water.

Examples of rheophilic animals[]

Insects[]

  • Many aquatic insects living in riffles require current to survive.[1]
  • Epeorus sylvicola, a rheophilic mayfly species (Ephemeroptera).

Birds[]

Fish[]

A very large number of rheophilic fish species are known and include members of at least 419 genera in 60 families.[2] Examples include:

  • Many species in the family Balitoridae, also known as the hill stream loaches.
  • Many species in the family Loricariidae from South and Central America
  • Many Chiloglanis species, which are freshwater catfish from Africa
  • The family Gyrinocheilidae.
  • Rheophilic cichlid genera/species:
  • Mylesinus, Myleus, Ossubtus, Tometes and Utiaritichthys, which are serrasalmids from tropical South America
  • The Danube streber (Zingel streber), family Percidae.

Molluscs[]

Amphibians[]

See also[]

  • Lotic ecosystem

References[]

  1. ^ Hynes, H. B. N. (1970). Ecology of Running Waters. Originally published in Toronto by University of Toronto Press, 555p.
  2. ^ Nathan K. Lujan and Kevin W. Conway (2015). "Life in the Fast Lane: A Review of Rheophily in Freshwater Fishes". Pp. 107–307 in: R. Riesch et al. (eds.). Extremophile Fishes. Springer International Publishing, Switzerland. ISBN 978-3-319-13361-4.
Retrieved from ""