Orange-throated Darters on McDowell Creek
Orange-throated Darters on McDowell Creek, engaged in a communal spawn:
(Many thanks to Keith Gido, KSU fish expert, for explaining what the video shows!)
Here is a closeup of one of those tiny fish:
And here is one of the males, all decked out for breeding season:
It's not easy to get a good look at a Darter.
In fact, for years I didn't see them clearly enough to know if they were fish at all.
I would see them scuttling across the bottom and diving under debris, where they hid from view. I would catch the briefest glimpse of a dinosaur-looking head and proto-legs just behind it, sticking out to the side.
What were they? Tadpoles? Lizards? Some sort of larvae?
Finally, I saw one in the open long enough to see the fins. What had looked like proto-legs were actually fins stuck off to the side to keep the Darter close to the bottom:
Nature educator Pat Silovsky explains more about Darters:
Director of Milford Nature Center and stream ecologist Dr. Pat Silovsky visited McDowell Creek on March 19, 2021.
Orange-throated Darters are bottom-scuttlers--but they are also beautiful fish.
--Post by Margy Stewart, Prairie Heritage, Inc.
All photos and videos are from McDowell Creek, Bird Runner Wildlife Refuge, Geary County, Kansas.