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  2. Sucker rod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sucker_rod

    The line of sucker rods is represented in this diagram by the solid black line in the center of the well. A sucker rod is a steel rod, typically between 7 and 9 metres (25 and 30 ft) in length, and threaded at both ends, used in the oil industry to join together the surface and downhole components of a reciprocating piston pump installed in an oil well.

  3. Bigmouth buffalo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bigmouth_buffalo

    The bigmouth buffalo's native distribution is confined to the countries of Canada and the United States of America. [18] It is native to the Red River of the North and Mississippi River drainage basins, from Manitoba, Canada, and North Dakota, United States, to the Ohio River and south in the Mississippi River system to Texas and Alabama.

  4. Northern hogsucker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_hogsucker

    While feeding, it scrapes of the top surface of rubble, turns over stones on the bottom, and sucks the loosened material which contains a variety of small organisms. As it feeds, other fish, such as shiners and smallmouth bass position themselves downstream to feed on the free-flowing materials the hogsucker roots up.

  5. Smallmouth buffalo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smallmouth_buffalo

    The smallmouth buffalo's diet is primarily that of a detritivore, using its ventral sucker mouth to pick up vegetation and other organic matter from the bottom of its habitat, often scraping algae off of rocks. It is also quite the invertivore, consuming zooplankton, insect larvae, mollusk larvae, and small crustaceans.

  6. Catostomus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catostomus

    C. d. jarrovii (Cope, 1874) (Zuni bluehead sucker) Catostomus fumeiventris R. R. Miller, 1973 (Owens sucker) Catostomus insignis Baird & Girard, 1854 (Sonora sucker) Catostomus latipinnis Baird & Girard, 1853 (flannelmouth sucker) Catostomus leopoldi Siebert & W. L. Minckley, 1986 (Bavispe sucker) Catostomus macrocheilus Girard, 1856 ...

  7. Creek chubsucker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creek_chubsucker

    Creek chubsuckers are one of about sixty-two species of in the family Catostomidae. All but two species are endemic to North America, [5] and creek chubsuckers can be found in many of the freshwater tributaries of the Atlantic slope streams from Maine to Altamaha drainage of Georgia; Gulf slope streams east to Escambia River drainage, Alabama (single population), west to San Jacinto system ...

  8. Catostomus discobolus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catostomus_discobolus

    The bluehead sucker is the largest of all Arizona endemic suckers, reaching lengths over 11.8 in. Their colors are very similar to the desert sucker, with dark green or dark silvery top portions and light yellow bottoms. The bluehead has the largest lips of any sucker and has tiny papillae on the lower lip.

  9. Utah sucker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utah_sucker

    This is a large fish that can grow up to 25.5" (65 cm) in length. Relatively elongate for a sucker, the back area between the head and dorsal fin is somewhat elevated. The mouth is entirely under the snout, with thick lips, of which the upper lip has eight rows of coarse papillae, the second and third rows from the inside being significantly larger.