Esox

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Pike (fish)
)

Esox
Temporal range: Paleocene–Recent
Northern pike (E. lucius)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Esociformes
Family: Esocidae
G. Cuvier, 1817
Genus: Esox
Linnaeus, 1758
Type species
Esox lucius

Esox is a

Esox lucius, the northern pike
.

Esox have a fossil record extending back to the

.

Pikes have the elongated, torpedo-like shape typical of predatory fishes, with sharply pointed heads and sharp teeth. Their coloration is typically grey-green with a mottled or spotted appearance with stripes along their backs, providing camouflage among underwater weeds, and each individual pike marking patterns are unique like fingerprints. Pikes can grow to a maximum recorded length of 1.83 m (6 ft), reaching a maximum recorded weight of 35 kg (77 lb).[citation needed]

Etymology

E. lucius specimen — a "chain pickerel" in the original sense — in an aquarium
.

The generic name Esox (pike fish) derives from the

Carolus Linnæus attributes Esox to the pike fish which is of similar form and appearance but taxonomically different from the salmoniformes, whereas the first mention of Esox as a marine animal appears in the writings of Hesychius
.

The

Old English word píc originally referring to a pickaxe. The plural of pike is also pike.[1][2]

A

Old Norse gaddr (spike) (cf. the modern Swedish name for the pike, gädda, the Danish "gedde", the Norwegian "gjedde" and Scottish Gaelic: geadais). The Dutch name for the pike (snoek) has been given to a wide variety of fish reminding sailors of the pike (see snoek, snook
).

The English "pike" originally referred specifically to the adult fish, the diminutive form "pickerel" (now used to name some of the smaller pike species, e.g.

pikeperch
(Sander lucioperca) which is more akin to walleye than to pike. Pike are also called "jackfish" in North America and informally "slough shark" in Western Canada.

Species

Currently, seven recognized species are placed in this genus:

Image Scientific name Common Name Subspecies Distribution
Esox aquitanicus Denys, Dettai, Persat, Hautecœur & Keith
, 2014
Aquitanian pike[3]
Adour drainages in southwestern France
Esox americanus J. F. Gmelin
, 1789
American pickerel the
Gulf Coast from Mississippi to Florida; the Great Lakes Basin from Ontario to Michigan, down to the western Gulf Coast, from East Texas
to Mississippi.
Esox cisalpinus Bianco & Delmastro, 2011 Southern pike[4]
western Balkans
.
Esox lucius Linnaeus, 1758 Northern pike Britain, Ireland, northern Europe, most of Canada, and most parts of the United States
Esox masquinongy Mitchill
, 1824
Muskellunge
  • Esox masquinongy masquinongy (Great Lakes muskellunge or Spotted muskellunge )
  • Esox masquinongy ohioensis (Chautauqua muskellunge or Barred muskellunge)
  • Esox masquinongy immaculatus (Clear muskellunge)
mesotrophic lakes and large rivers from northern Michigan, northern Wisconsin, and northern Minnesota through the Great Lakes region, north into Canada
Esox niger Lesueur
, 1818
Chain pickerel southern Canada to Florida, and west to Texas. On the Atlantic Northeast in Maine, New Hampshire, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia
Esox reichertii Dybowski
, 1869
Amur pike the
Amur River system in Northeast Asia

Hybrids between Esox masquinongy and Esox lucius are well-known and referred to as the tiger muskellunge.

Fossil species

Fossil Esox

The oldest fossil species of Esox is

Green River formation,[6] and Esox nogaicus, is known from the Pleistocene of Ukraine, and species from the Miocene (Esox sibiricus) and Pliocene (Esox moldavicus) deposits from Ukraine, Poland, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, and Moldavia.[7] Two additional fossil species, both from the Cretaceous of Alberta, Canada, are placed in their own genera: Estesesox foxi[8] (Santonian to Campanian[9]), and Oldmanesox canadensis[8][6] (Campanian to Maastrichtian[10]
).

Diet

Pike in Haus des Meeres, Vienna

Pike feed on a wide range of food sources, predominantly smaller

shoal fish. Pike are also cannibalistic, sometimes preying upon smaller members of their own species. This can be seen clearly in the northern pike
.

They will also prey on insects and amphibians such as newts or frogs in times when their usual food is scarce, and occasionally on small mammals like moles or mice when caught water-borne. Small birds such as ducklings may become a target for hungry pike. Pike are also known to prey on swimming snakes.

They are, however, undeserving of their reputation for being overly vicious predators. There have been some incidents of pike "attacks" on people.

pest
seems to lie predominantly amongst a small handful of anglers and fishery managers who think that invasive species of pike are a threat to native rough fish and also other sport fish.

Angling

Sign on the River Shannon, Ireland
A caught pike, supported by the gill covers to prevent the fish from biting the hand of the angler who caught it

Effective methods for catching this hard-fighting fish include dead baits, live baits, and lure fishing. Pike can easily be damaged when handled since they are not as robust as their reputation would suggest. Colour of lure can be influenced by water clarity and weather conditions. Since pike have numerous sharp teeth it is wise to take extreme care when unhooking them. The use of a wet leather

surgical forceps
to remove hooks is highly recommended on safety grounds. If practicing catch and release fishing, care for the pike should be the pike angler's utmost concern. The formerly recommended practice of grasping a pike by its eye sockets (misinterpreted as "its eyes") resulted in numerous released pike that quickly died from inability to see prey any longer.

The current recommended method of grasping pike is to close the hand firmly over the gill covers, and to make the period of handling as short as possible before release. Grabbing a pike by the gill covers is not feasible when a pike is very big, but it is easy to handle a pike by inserting the fingers at the bottom of the gill opening and grabbing the lower jaw. Big pike should also be supported at the belly. When a pike is held this way it is also easier to keep the mouth open to remove a hook. Some anglers now use special grips to grab the pike's front lower jaw, which can add to the safety of an anglers because of the danger imposed by the hooks of the lure or tackle and the pike's teeth. However these can cause serious damage to a pike's lower jaw. The Pike Anglers Club was formed in 1977 to campaign for the preservation of pike and the sport of pike fishing.

Pike are susceptible to gut hooking when fished for with natural bait. Upon taking the bait, the pike will hold it for a short time in its mouth as it moves off. The pike will then, usually, turn the bait in its mouth, so that it sits in alignment with its throat to ease swallowing. It is recommended that when pike fishing the process is not allowed to go this far and a strike is recommended as soon as a bite is indicated. Otherwise, what is known as gut hooking will result, which will normally kill or seriously injure the fish. Dutch research shows that cutting the line immediately when the fish is gut hooked will still give low mortality (14%). The hooks in the gut or stomach were either encapsulated or removed from the body.[12] Placing hooks near the rear of the bait reduces the risk of deep hooking.[13]

Other methods of catching and handling pike that are now frowned upon are the gaff and the gag. The gaff is a metal hook on the end of a pole used to hook through the fish's body in place of a more humane landing net. A gag is a device for holding open the pike's mouth whilst unhooking. These are now illegal in Scotland, as they put a huge amount of pressure on a pike's jaw, thus causing irreparable damage.

Cuisine

sauce Nantua

The taste of pike and pickerel is highly esteemed, but the "multitude of long, fine, forked bones" are problematic.[14]

Escoffier believed, falsely, that quenelles had completely displaced the whole fish from the menu.[14]

Submarines and tanks

Two

Iosif Stalin tank (IS-3)
was also nicknamed Shchuka, in reference to its sharply pointed hull front.

Cultural significance

Mythology

Russian mythology holds that the pike is one of several forms assumed by evil water spirits called

Sheksna River. Russian fairy tales, on the other hand, also tell about an old wise pike that can fulfil wishes of the one who catches it, if its catcher releases it back into its habitat.[17]

In the Finnish Kalevala, Väinämöinen creates a kantele (string instrument) from the jawbone of a pike.

Heraldry

In heraldry, the pike is called a lucy (English heraldry) or a ged (Scottish heraldry).[1] It is usually blazoned either naiant (swimming), embowed (bowed) or hauriant (jumping), though pairs of lucies may appear addorsed (back to back), as in the arms of the Finnish town of Uusikaupunki (Argent, two lucies addorsed azure).[citation needed]

Uusikaupunki coat of arms
The canting arms of Lucie de Cockermouth: Gules, three lucies in pale argent, (2 and 1).
Coat of arms of Gimte, in Lower Saxony, Germany.

Literature

In

seafaring warriors who frequent pirate ships and raid
the coastal regions.

References

  1. ^ .
  2. LCCN 02020303. Archived from the original
    on 2 November 2007. Retrieved 29 May 2009.
  3. .
  4. ^ Lucentini, Puletti, Ricciolini, Gigliarelli, Fontaneto, Lanfaloni, Bilò, Natali, Panara (2011). Molecular and Phenotypic Evidence of a New Species of Genus Esox (Esocidae, Esociformes, Actinopterygii): The Southern Pike, Esox flaviae. PLoS ONE 6(12): e25218. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0025218
  5. S2CID 213203684
    .
  6. ^ .
  7. .
  8. ^ a b Wilson, Brinkman & Neuman, 1992
  9. ^ "Fossilworks: Estesesox".
  10. ^ "Fossilworks: Oldmanesox".
  11. ^ "Water skier bitten by giant pike". The Guardian. 31 August 1999. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
  12. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 March 2009. Retrieved 7 February 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. ^ "Coping with Deep Hooked Pike | Pike Anglers Club of Great Britain". Archived from the original on 13 September 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2013.
  14. ^ a b Waverley Root, Food, 1996, p. 353
  15. ^ 'Piscator', "Pike Fishing", The Sportsman (Second Series), 2:3:139 (March 1840)
  16. ^ Marthe Daudet, Shirley King, translator and adaptor, Pampille's Table: Recipes and Writings from the French Countryside from Marthe Daudet's Les Bons Plats de France [1934], p. 153
  17. ^ "Emelya the Simpleton", russian folklore fairy tale. At the Pike's Behest

External links