Rheophile

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:

Molluscs

Amphibians

gollark: You know those are definitionally different things?
gollark: > flat tax> regressive tax
gollark: That sounds nice, though there'll inevitably be other taxes tacked on top.
gollark: ... isn't that actually quite significant?
gollark: I don't think you can blame just *one* factor like contractors for government inefficiency.

See also

  • Lotic ecosystem

Notes

  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
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.