Ouachita Crayfish
CRAYFISHES OF THE
OUACHITA NATIONAL FOREST, ARKANSAS AND OKLAHOMA
The Final Report to USDA Forest Service
Ouachita National Forest
Hot Springs, Arkansas
by
Henry W. Robison, Ph.D.
Department of Biological Sciences
Southern Arkansas University
Magnolia, Arkansas 71754-9354
September 1, 2000
A cooperatively funded project by:
Dr. Henry Robison (SAU);
Ouachita National Forest; and
The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Subject Page
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
HISTORICAL REVIEW BY STATE
A. Review of Arkansas Portion
B. Review of Oklahoma Portion
DESCRIPTION OF THE AREA
GENERAL ASPECTS OF CRAYFISHES
A. General Considerations
B. Basic Life History Cycle
C. Taxonomic Considerations
D. Ecological Categories
CRAYFISHES OF THE OUACHITA NATIONAL FOREST
A. ONF - Arkansas and Oklahoma
B. Arkansas Portion ONF
C. Oklahoma Portion ONF
SPECIES ACCOUNTS
A. Fallicambarus harpi
B. Fallicambarus jeanae
C. Fallicambarus fodiens
D. Fallicambarus strawni
E. Faxonella blairi
F. Orconectes acares
G. Orconectes leptogonopodus
H. Orconectes menae
I. Orconectes palmeri
J. Orconectes saxatilis
K. Orconectes sp. nov
L. Procambarus acutus
M. Procambarus curdi
N. Procambarus liberorum
O. Procambarus ouachitae
P. Procambarus parasimulans
Q. Procambarus reimeri
R. Procambarus tenuis
CONSERVATION STATUS OF FOREST CRAYFISHES
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
LITERATURE CITED
GLOSSARY
TABLES
Dichotomous Key to the crayfish
INTRODUCTION
Crayfishes are an important part of aquatic habitats as they are
often the largest and most common invertebrates in streams and lakes.
Crayfishes serve as an important food source for many game and nongame
fishes such as smallmouth bass, and wildlife such as otters, minks,
weasels, and raccoons. They facilitate important ecological processes,
sustain recreational and commercial bait fisheries, and serve as
profitable and popular food resources (Taylor et al., 1996).
Unfortunately, little has been done in regard to the scientific
study of crayfishes in Arkansas and Oklahoma in general and in the
Ouachita Mountains physiographic region in particular. Although
often encountered by professional biologists, fishermen, and naturalists
alike, the main deterrent to a critical understanding and appreciation
of crayfishes by the nonspecialist lies in the certain difficulty
in identifying them to species. Except for Williams' (1954) monograph
on crayfishes of the Interior Highlands, biologists and resource
managers have little valid information in one source as to which
crayfish species occur within their particular areas. There is other
technical literature on individual crayfish species; however, it
is scattered through a plethora of scientific journals and books.
The present study of the crayfishes of the Ouachita National Forest
(ONF) in Arkansas and Oklahoma was initiated in an effort to elucidate
the crayfish fauna of this geographic area (Map 1). Such a study
has great utility to professional resource managers responsible
for the wildlife component of the Ouachita National Forest ecosystem.
The purposes of this study were primarily four-fold: (1) to determine
the species of crayfishes inhabiting the ONF in Arkansas and Oklahoma;
(2) to assess the abundance and distributional limits of the crayfish
species within the ONF; (3) to gather life history information seasonally
on the various species of crayfishes within the Forest; and (4)
to assess the current status of each of the crayfish species based
upon distributional and abundance data assembled from this study.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Field work for the Arkansas part of this project was conducted
from April, 1996 through October, 1997. A few Arkansas ONF collections
were added from the spring of 2000. A total of 256 collections of
crayfishes was made which resulted in 2,337 individuals collected
in an effort to document the crayfish fauna of the Arkansas portion
of the Ouachita National Forest (Table 1, Map 2).
Field work in Oklahoma began in September, 1998, and continued
through July, 2000. A total of 204 collections of crayfishes resulting
in 1,192 individuals was made in the ONF areas in Oklahoma (Table
2, Map 3).
Many of the specimens were released unharmed following careful
identification while voucher series were made of others. Collecting
localities visited during the three-year study are shown in Maps
4 and 5. Collecting was concentrated in the ONF streams and rivers
and additionally in wet seepage areas specifically for burrowing
crayfish species. Much of the field work occurred during the fall,
spring and summer to utilize optimal field conditions.
A variety of collecting methods was used in the documentation of
the ONF crayfish fauna including the use of common sense minnow
seines, one-man seines, electroshocking equipment, aquatic dip nets,
baited and unbaited crayfish traps, and by physically digging the
burrowing specimens from their burrows.
Selected specimens were kept alive in a cooler and transferred
to Southern Arkansas University in Magnolia, AR, where photographs
were made of the best specimens. Representative specimens from each
collecting site were preserved in 60% isopropyl alcohol for later
study. Preserved specimens were deposited in the Southern Arkansas
University Invertebrate Collection and the Smithsonian Institution
Crayfish Collection after careful study of individual variation
among species.
In addition to collections made during this survey, museum specimens
housed at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., and Southern
Arkansas University were studied to document the identifications
and distributions of the crayfish species. All previous literature
dealing with Arkansas and Oklahoma crayfish species was reviewed
and distributional information was utilized when deemed accurate.
HISTORICAL REVIEW BY STATE
Review of Arkansas Portion
The first recorded mention of a crayfish from the state of Arkansas
was Hagen (1870). Few additional references can be found to Arkansas
crayfishes until the late 1940s and 1950s. Of special importance
to students of crayfishes of the Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas
is Williams (1954). Although outdated now, it remains the foundation
from which to start any serious investigation of area crayfishes.
Reimer (1963) completed a master's thesis on the crayfishes of Arkansas
and included records for the Ouachitas.
Bouchard and Robison (1980) presented an inventory of the species
of crayfishes living in Arkansas and provided data on general habitats
of crayfishes in all physiographic regions of the state. Hobbs and
Robison (1988) described two new species of Procambarus from Arkansas
and provided a key to all of the species of the burrowing subgenus
Girardiella. In addition, distributional information was updated
on all species of the subgenus. Hobbs and Robison (1989) investigated
the Arkansas species of the burrowing crayfish genus Fallicambarus
and described two new species from the state.
Review of Oklahoma Portion
The first survey of Oklahoma crayfishes was by Creaser and Ortenburger
(1933) who reported 10 species as occurring in Oklahoma, one of
which was considered by Reimer (1969) to be erroneous. Thirty years
later, Reimer (1969) reported 19 species and subspecies of crayfishes
inhabiting Oklahoma. More recently, Taylor et al., (1996) refined
the Oklahoma crayfish species list to 23 species occurring within
the state including four species of Cambarus, one species each of
the genera Fallicambarus and Faxonella, eleven species of Orconectes,
and six species of Procambarus. Hobbs H. Hobbs, III provided the
most recent addition to the Oklahoma state crayfish fauna in 1993
when a cave species, Cambarus subterraneus, was officially described
(Hobbs, 1993).
DESCRIPTION OF THE AREA
The Ouachita National Forest (Map 1) is the oldest and largest
National Forest in the South, comprising 1,775,507 acres in Arkansas
and Oklahoma (Mr. Richard Standage, pers. comm.). Of this total,
1,424,439 acres of the ONF occur in Arkansas and 351,068 acres of
the ONF occur in Oklahoma. In Arkansas the ONF is situated primarily
in the Ouachita Mountains physiographic region and contained within
portions of Montgomery, Polk, Garland, Logan, Perry, Scott, and
Yell counties. In Oklahoma, the ONF is situated primarily in the
southwestern Ouachita Mountains in LeFlore and McCurtain counties;
however, a disjunct section of the ONF, the Tiak District, occurs
in southern McCurtain County, Oklahoma.
The entire ONF is dissected by three large river drainages: the
Arkansas River drainage to the north and west and the Red River
(Kiamichi and Little River systems) and Ouachita River drainage
in the southern portion. River systems of the Arkansas River drainage
within the ONF include the Poteau River, Petit Jean River, and Fourche
la Fave River. The Red River drainage includes the Kiamichi River
system and the Little River system which is represented by the Mountain
Fork River, Cossatot River, western Saline River, Glover River,
and Little River while the Ouachita River drainage is represented
by the mainstem Ouachita River, Caddo River, Little Missouri River,
eastern Saline River (with its three forks), and a multitude of
smaller tributaries.
GENERAL ASPECTS OF CRAYFISHES
General Considerations
Crayfishes are a most important and integral component of aquatic
ecosystems found throughout Arkansas and Oklahoma. In many streams,
sport fishes such as sunfishes and basses (Family Centrarchidae)
may consume up to two-thirds of the annual production of crayfishes
(Taylor et al., 1996). Crayfishes contribute to the maintenance
of food webs by processing vegetation and leaf litter (Huryn and
Wallace, 1987; Griffth et al., 1994), which increases the availability
of nutrients and organic matter to other aquatic and terrestrial
organisms.
Crayfishes are members of the most numerous of all animal groups,
the arthropods or joint-legged animals. They are classified as crustaceans
because of their possession of two pair of antennae and the fact
that they breathe by gills. Crayfishes are protected by a heavily
armoured exoskeleton and have five pairs of walking legs, the first
of which functions as enlarged pincers called chelipeds (Figure
1).
Approximately 450 species of crayfishes occur worldwide and about
338 are found in the United States and Canada (Pflieger, 1996; Taylor
et al., 1996). Arkansas has 53 crayfish species (Bouchard and Robison,
1980; Taylor et al., 1996; H. W. Robison, personal data) belonging
to one family, Cambaridae, and classified into seven genera. The
genus Procambarus slightly dominates the crayfish fauna of Arkansas
with 18 species, while the genus Orconectes is represented by 16
species, Fallicambarus with eight species, Cambarus with six species,
Cambarellus and Faxonella with two species each, and Bouchardina
with a single species. Several additional undescribed species of
crayfishes are known from Arkansas, but formal scientific descriptions
of them are not yet completed.
Oklahoma has 23 crayfish species recorded from within its state
boundaries (Reimer, 1969; Taylor et al., 1996) contained within
the family Cambaridae and classified into five genera. The genus
Procambarus is represented in Oklahoma by six species, while Orconectes
is the dominant genus with 11 species, and the genus Cambarus contains
four species, with both Faxonella and Fallicambarus having a single
species within the state.
Prior to discussion of the various crayfishes documented from the
ONF, a brief overview of several basic life history aspects involving
crayfishes, general taxonomic points, and ecological considerations
are presented.
Basic Life History Cycle
Although highly variable, most crayfishes in Arkansas and Oklahoma
mate between September and March. Form I males (breeding males)
seek out receptive females and mating is accomplished. Sperm are
carried by the female until oviposition (egg laying) which may be
in March, April and May, although some species begin as early as
December or January (Page, 1985). Following oviposition, the eggs
are attached to the underside of her abdomen and females are said
to be ovigerous or "in berry." Females carry the eggs
for 2-20 weeks depending on the water temperature (Page, 1985).
After hatching, young move quickly through a series of molts until
sexual maturity is reached by late summer or early fall.
Little is known about the specifics of the life cycles of the particular
species which inhabit the Ouachita National Forest. Hopefully, future
research on the crayfishes of the ONF will remedy this current lack
of knowledge.
Taxonomic Considerations
The taxonomy of North American crayfishes is based upon numerous
morphological characteristics (See Hobbs, 1972a) The secondary sexual
characters are actually the most important for identification purposes,
such as the annulus ventralis, copulatory hooks, bosses on the coxae
of some periopods (walking legs), and first pleopods (Bouchard and
Robison, 1980). The morphology of the male's first pleopods is the
single most important character in identifying most species and
practically all of the genera of North American crayfishes, including
the crayfishes of the ONF.
In crayfishes of the family Cambaridae, adult males exhibit two
morphological forms during the year, molting into these conditions
with only the first form (form I) males capable of breeding. The
second form, or form II male is sexually nonfunctional (Bouchard
and Robison, 1980). The first pleopod (or gonopod) of the form I
male has delicate, finely sculptured elements, at least one of which
consists of amber, corneous material. The first pleopod of the form
I male is easily distinguished from the form II gonopod which has
elements usually reduced in length and/or more inflated and without
a corneous deposit (See Hobbs, 1972a). Also reduced in size are
the remaining secondary sexual characters such as the chelae.
It is therefore many times imperative to the person wishing to
identify the species in question to have a first form male to make
positive identifications. Juveniles and female specimens are always
more difficult to identify to species level.
Ecological Categories
The crayfishes of both Arkansas and Oklahoma can be grouped into
three broad, overlapping, ecological categories (Reimer, 1969; Bouchard
and Robison, 1980). There are those species that inhabit the diverse
surface water habitats (epigeaners), those species that utilize
underground solution channels in limestone regions (cavernicoles),
and those species that burrow into the subsurface water table (burrowers).
Because these categories are not rigid, there is some overlap among
groups.
Hobbs (1942) recognized three categories of burrowers and this
classification has been found useful to crayfish workers, i.e. primary
burrowers, secondary burrowers, and tertiary burrowers. Hobbs (1981)
characterized primary burrowers as crayfishes that spend almost
their entire lives below the surface of the ground, only occasionally
leaving their lairs on brief forays on land, presumedly searching
for food, and at times, a mate. Seldom are the burrows in connection
with bodies of open water. Primary burrowers inhabit burrows where
for most of the year the water table does not drop more than a meter
or so beneath the surface. Typically these areas may be easily recognized
by the presence of hydrophilic sedges. Many times these areas occur
near the roadbed. Secondary burrowers generally occupy burrows but
may wander into the open water during rainy periods. Tertiary burrowers
burrow only in periods of drought or occasionally during the breeding
season. The rest of the year they inhabit streams or other permanent
or semi-permanent bodies of water.
CRAYFISHES OF THE OUACHITA NATIONAL FOREST
ONF: Arkansas and Oklahoma
A total of 18 species of crayfishes classified in four genera (Fallicambarus,
Faxonella, Orconectes, and Procambarus) was documented from the
entire Ouachita National Forest in Arkansas and Oklahoma during
the four-year study (Table 3).
Of this total (18), 14 crayfish species were documented from the
Arkansas portion of the ONF while eight species were documented
from the Oklahoma portion of the ONF. Only four species occurred
in both state portions of the ONF. Those four crayfishes which occurred
in both state portions of the ONF were Orconectes palmeri, Orconectes
leptogonopodus, Procambarus acutus, and Procambarus tenuis.
Approximately 4,529 individual crayfish were collected in 460 separate
collections from the ONF during the four-year study in an effort
to document the crayfish fauna of the ONF in Arkansas and Oklahoma
(Table 3).
Arkansas Portion ONF
During the four-year study 14 species of crayfishes contained within
three genera were collected or documented from the Arkansas portion
of the ONF. A total of 256 collections representing 2,337 individual
crayfishes was made from the ONF in Arkansas. Arkansas has 53 species
inhabiting the state, the most of any state west of the Mississippi
River (Bouchard and Robison, 1980; Taylor et al., 1996). The 14
species documented from within the ONF in Arkansas represented 26.4
percent of the total crayfish fauna of Arkansas.
Table 4 provides the abundance
of the 14 crayfish species documented from the Arkansas portion
of the ONF during this study. Abundance was divided into four categories:
abundant, common, uncommon, and rare. A species was considered rare
if two or fewer collections were made. If 3-10 collections were
made of the species, it was considered uncommon, while 11-20 collections
provided a species with a designation of common. If a species was
collected more than 20 times it was considered abundant. These designations
are not meant to imply overall conservation status, but rather simply
to provide the reader with some idea of what to expect regarding
the abundance of these crayfishes on the ONF.
The two most abundant crayfish species within the streams and rivers
of the Arkansas portion of the ONF were Orconectes acares which
was collected 129 times with 1,258 individual specimens taken while
Orconectes palmeri longimanus was taken 115 times with 807 specimens
resulting (Table 4). In terms
of abundance frequency, 53.83 percent of the total crayfishes collected
were Orconectes acares while 34.53 percent were Orconectes palmeri
longimanus (Table 4). Both crayfish
species occurred in almost half of all collections made from lotic
situations within the Arkansas portion of the ONF.
Orconectes leptogonopodus was considered common on the Arkansas
portion of the ONF while Fallicambarus harpi, Orconectes sp. nov.,
Procambarus acutus, P. reimeri were deemed uncommon (Table
4). Rarely taken from the Arkansas portion of the ONF were Orconectes
menae, Fallicambarus jeanae, Fallicambarus strawni, Procambarus
liberorum, P. ouachitae, and P. tenuis (Table
4). Although not collected during this study, Procambarus parasimulans
was considered rare on the ONF in Arkansas having been collected
only once years ago by Dr. Pat Blair, University of Tulsa from near
Caddo Gap and identified by the late Dr. Horton H. Hobbs of the
Smithsonian Institution.
Crayfish habitat for lotic species such as Orconectes palmeri longimanus,
and O. acares is quite abundant on the ONF in Arkansas and a large
number of individuals of each species was collected by lifting large
flat rocks lying in the stream or at stream margins or by seining
swift flowing shoal areas. Headwater areas of all ONF streams had
abundant crayfish habitat and crayfishes were common at most places
searched.
In addition to the vast lotic habitat on the Arkansas portion of
the ONF, a relatively large amount of lentic habitat occurs within
the Ouachita National Forest from both natural and man-made sources.
Lake Winona, Iron Fork Lake, and of course Lake Ouachita are some
examples of man-made lentic environments.
Other lentic bodies of water include a number of Forest Service
ponds constructed as wildlife watering areas which are available
as crayfish habitat with species such as Orconectes palmeri longimanus
proving extremely abundant in some of these.
Burrowing habitat in the form of seepage areas, fields, and roadside
ditches is rather abundant throughout the Arkansas portion of the
ONF in addition to the numerous seeps and spring areas. The ONF
in Arkansas lies in the heart of the distributions of some of the
most interesting burrowing crayfishes. Although generally uncommon
except in certain specific habitats and at precise times of the
year, primary burrowers of the ONF were Fallicambarus strawni, F.
harpi, F. jeanae, Procambarus liberorum, P. parasimulans, and P.
reimeri.
Distributionally, the greatest diversity in crayfish species occurred
in the Ouachita River drainage (Table
5), as eight species were collected within its confines. The
Little Missouri River drainage yielded five species while three
species were taken from the Caddo River, Poteau River, and Fourche
la Fave River (Table 5).
Oklahoma Portion ONF
During the four-year study eight species of crayfishes within four
genera were collected or documented from the ONF in Oklahoma. A
total of 204 collections representing 1,192 individual crayfishes
was made from the ONF in Oklahoma. Oklahoma has 23 species living
within its borders (Taylor et al., 1996). Although only eight species
in four genera were documented from the Oklahoma portion of the
ONF, this figure represents 34.8 percent of the total crayfish fauna
of Oklahoma.
Table 6 provides the abundance
of the eight crayfish species documented from the Oklahoma ONF during
this study. Just as with the Arkansas portion of the ONF, abundance
for the Oklahoma portion of the ONF was divided into four categories:
abundant, common, uncommon, and rare. A species was considered rare
if two or fewer collections were made. If 3-10 collections were
made of the species, it was considered uncommon while 11-20 collections
provided a species with a designation of common. If a species was
collected more than 20 times it was considered abundant. These designations
are not meant to imply overall conservation status, but rather simply
to provide the reader with some idea of what to expect regarding
the abundance of these crayfishes on the Oklahoma ONF.
One species dominated the crayfish fauna of the ONF in Oklahoma.
That species was Orconectes palmeri longimanus (Table
6). A total of 158 collections of Orconectes palmeri longimanus
was made in the Oklahoma portion of the ONF which resulted in 1,041
individuals being taken (Table 6).
In terms of abundance frequency, an astounding 87.33 percent of
the total crayfishes collected during the study in Oklahoma were
Orconectes palmeri longimanus (Table
6). This species was collected in 87.29 percent of all collections
made from aquatic habitats within the ONF in Oklahoma.
Procambarus acutus was collected 20 times (58 individuals) and
Orconectes leptogonopodus was taken 12 times (54 specimens) rendering
both species to be considered common on the ONF in Oklahoma, while
Fallicambarus fodiens (six times), Faxonella blairi (five times),
and Procambarus curdi (three times) were deemed uncommon (Table
6). Rarely taken (only twice collected) from the ONF in Oklahoma
was Procambarus tenuis (Table 6).
Although not collected during this study, Orconectes saxatilis is
considered the rarest crayfish on the ONF in Oklahoma.
Crayfish habitat for lotic species such as Orconectes palmeri longimanus,
and O. leptogonopodus is abundant on the ONF in Oklahoma and each
species was collected by lifting large flat rocks lying in the stream
or at stream margins or by seining swift flowing shoal areas. Headwater
areas of all ONF streams in Oklahoma had abundant crayfish habitat
and crayfishes were common at most places searched.
In addition to lotic habitat, a limited amount of lentic habitat
occurs within the ONF in Oklahoma from both natural and man-made
sources. Cedar Lake in LeFlore County and Ward Lake in McCurtain
County are good examples of larger lentic habitat within the ONF
boundaries. Within the ONF are also Forest Service ponds constructed
as wildlife watering areas which are available as crayfish habitat
with species such as Procambarus acutus and Orconectes palmeri longimanus
often reaching large numbers.
Burrowing habitat in the form of pasture, abandoned fields, roadside
ditches and other low-lying seepage areas is abundant in some areas
of the ONF in Oklahoma, particularly in the Tiak District. Primary
burrowers such as Fallicambarus fodiens, Procambarus curdi, Faxonella
blairi, and even secondary burrowers such as Procambarus acutus
and Orconectes palmeri longimanus utilize these abundant habitats
within the ONF.
Distributionally, the greatest diversity in crayfish species in
the Oklahoma portion of the ONF occurred in the Little River system
(Table 7), where six species were
collected within its defined watershed. The Kiamichi River system
provided habitat for four crayfish species while three species were
taken from the Mountain Fork River and two crayfish species each
were from the Glover and Poteau River, respectively (Table
7).
CONSERVATION STATUS
OF FOREST CRAYFISHES
Taylor et al., (1996) recently published a comprehensive report
of the conservation status of the crayfishes of the United States
and Canada. This inclusive document provided by the seven member
American Fisheries Society (AFS) Endangered Species Committee (of
which the Principal Investigator was a member) is the first attempt
to provide a conservation status for all 338 crayfish species occurring
within the United States and Canada for use by resource managers,
lawmakers, citizens, and aquatic biologists alike.
Table 8 presents the conservation
status of each of the 18 crayfish species collected on the ONF in
Arkansas and Oklahoma as given by Taylor et al., (1996). Regarding
crayfish species inhabiting the ONF, Orconectes saxatilis, Fallicambarus
harpi, and Procambarus reimeri were considered "Endangered"
while Fallicambarus strawni and Orconectes menae were given a conservation
status of "Threatened" (Taylor et al., (1996). Fallicambarus
jeanae and Procambarus tenuis were designated a conservation status
of "Special Concern" which is a species that may become
endangered or threatened by relatively minor disturbances to its
habitat and deserves careful monitoring of its abundance and distribution
(Table 8). Ten of the other crayfish
species documented on the Ouachita National Forest in Arkansas and
Oklahoma were "Currently Stable." A single, as yet undescribed
crayfish species, Orconectes sp. nov., collected on the ONF in Arkansas
was not considered by Taylor et al., (1996).
The most endangered crayfish species on either the Oklahoma or
Arkansas portions of the Ouachita National Forest obviously is Orconectes
saxatilis. This crayfish species has only been collected once by
Bouchard and Bouchard (1976) from Pigeon Creek, LeFlore County,
Oklahoma. It was not taken during this survey, although three separate
trips were made to the type locality specifically to collect this
crayfish. It is recommended that a separate Challenge Cost-Share
be immediately initiated to study this crayfish for the entire year
and specifically in the area of the type locality in an effort to
document if it still exists.
Procambarus reimeri seems to be in better shape with regard to
its conservation status of endangered. It is fairly common in specific
areas near Mena, Polk County, Arkansas, but should be monitored
carefully in the future.
A recent report by Robison (2000) considers Fallicambarus harpi
to be a species of "Special Concern" as it was found to
be much more common and widespread than formerly believed.
With regard to the two crayfish species considered "Threatened,"
Fallicambarus strawni and Orconectes menae should be monitored closely
in the future to determine any possible trends.
Back to Natural Resources
|