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  2. White sucker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_sucker

    The white sucker is a long, round-bodied fish with a dark green, grey, copper, brown, or black back and sides and a light underbelly. The fish also has typical features of primitive Cypriniformes fishes, such as a homocercal tail, cycloid scales, and dorsal, pectoral, and pelvic fin rays. [5]

  3. Catostomus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catostomus

    Catostomus is a genus of fish belonging to the family Catostomidae, commonly known as suckers. This genus of fish usually lives in freshwater basins. [ 2 ] Most members of the genus are native to North America, but C. catostomus is also found in Russia.

  4. Catostomidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catostomidae

    Suckers were an important source of food for Indigenous Americans across the continent. Many fishing methods were employed with the most elaborate being stone fish traps constructed on spawning rivers, remnants of these traps can be seen today in Ahjumawi Lava Springs State Park where the Achomawi people trapped Sacramento suckers .

  5. Bigmouth buffalo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bigmouth_buffalo

    [11] [12] Bigmouth buffalo may also accrue unique black or orange pigmentation markings with age, [3] [12] and in some rare individuals, white-edged fins. [6] Like other catostomids it has a long dorsal fin , but unlike all other extant species it has a terminal (forward-facing) mouth reflecting its unique, pelagic feeding ecology.

  6. Shortnose sucker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shortnose_sucker

    The sucker family has a long history in the fossil record, going back millions of years. Shortnose suckers share characteristics with other suckers in the Klamath River Basin, but most closely resemble Lost River suckers; which they are known to frequently hybridize with. The Lost River population of shortnose suckers have more subterminally ...

  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 ...

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  9. Longnose sucker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longnose_sucker

    However, longnose suckers can be distinguished by their comparatively finer scales. [4] The longnose sucker is distinctive for its physical characteristics. First, the longnose sucker, as the name suggests, has an elongated snout which helps to distinguish the species from other suckers. The elongated snout can be 1/3 of the total body length.