Table 5.—Species of Fishes Collected and Number of Stations in Each Stream System at Which Each Species Was Found.

Total number of stationsArkansas River
3 stations
Walnut River
5 stations
Grouse Creek
17 stations
Big Caney River
18 stations
Elk River
6 stations
Middle Caney
2 stations
Beaver Creek
3 stations
L. osseus 1 3 3 6 Seen
D. cepedianum Seen 1 1 3 2 1
Carpiodes carpio 2 1 1 1
I. bubalus 1 2 4 3
I. cyprinella 1
I. niger 2
M. erythrurum 410 3
M. melanops 1 3 1
Cyprinus carpio 1 4 4 2 1
C. anomalum 1 114 2 1
H. aestivalis 1
N. blennius 2
N. boops 214 2 2
N. buchanani 1 1
N. camurus13 2
N. deliciosus 3 3
N. girardi 2
N. lutrensis 3 4 1314 5 1 3
N. rubellus11
N. percobromus 3 3 1
N. umbratilis 818 4 2 2
N. volucellus 2 5 2 1
N. crysoleucas 1
H. placita 3 2
P. mirabilis 1 1
P. notatus 1 618 5 2 1
P. promelas 2 2 1 1 1 1
P. vigilax 1 3 1
P. tenellus 1 7 1 2
F. notatus 4 10 1 1 1
F. kansae 2
G. affinis 3 5 8 8 1
I. melas 1 4 12 9 5 3
I. natalis 6 3
I. punctatus 1 2 1 5 1
P. olivaris 1 1 1
E. spectabile 1 417 2 1
P. copelandi 1 5
P. phoxocephala 1 4
P. caprodes 5 8 1
M. salmoides 4 2 3 1
M. punctulatus 7 1
P. annularis 2 7 1 4 1
P. nigromaculatus 1
L. cyanellus 3 1417 5 1 3
L. humilis 1 4 1317 6 1 2
L. megalotis 3 918 6 2 2
L. macrochirus 1 3 3 2
A. grunniens 1 1
L. sicculus 5 7 4 1 1

DISTRIBUTIONAL VARIATIONS WITHIN THE SAME STREAM

An analysis of faunal variations in different parts of the same stream system was made for Big Caney River and Grouse Creek. Collecting was more extensive in these streams, and sampling was done over a wider range of habitat, than in the Arkansas and Walnut rivers.

The fish taken in the first five seine hauls at each station were counted and the number of each species was recorded as a percentage of the total number of fish taken. These percentages were calculated for the main stream and for each tributary in an attempt to discern possible intra-stream faunal patterns. In Table 6 lower, middle, and upper segments of each stream have been segregated and the average of all stations within each segment is shown.

The results are subject to several sources of error, some of which are discussed below:

(1) Seining techniques could not be entirely standardized. One station might present a series of long narrow riffles and narrow, shallow pools in which only a small seine could be used effectively; another station might consist of a large, deep, isolated pool in which a larger seine was needed for effective sampling. In practice, the five seine hauls were made with any of several seines ranging from ten to twenty feet in length.

(2) Seines are species-selective, due partly to the preference of certain fishes for special habitat niches. Fishes that are often found under stones or in weedy pools require special collecting techniques and frequently were not represented in the initial five hauls. If work subsequent to the first five hauls indicated that such fish were a prominent part of the fauna at a particular station, these results were considered before percentages were calculated.