Fishes of The Niger Delta Region
Fishes of The Niger Delta Region
of Nigeria
Ekinadose Orose, Edafe Odioko and Okechukwu Kenneth Wokeh *
Department of Animal and Environmental Biology, Hydrobiology and Fisheries Unit, University of Port Harcourt, PMB
5323, Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria.
Publication history: Received on 29 January 2021; revised on 27 February 2021; accepted on 01 March 2021
Abstract
The study was done to review some saltwater and freshwater fish species in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria. The Niger
Delta is one of the most prominent regions in Nigeria, endowed with several water bodies that are distributed as
freshwater like rivers, lakes, streams and creeks. These freshwater ecosystems in the region, are abundantly endowed
with fish species such as Clarias gariepinus, Pila ovate, Labeo coubie, Synodontis budgetti and Synodontis eupterus. Apart
from the freshwaters, the region also has vast marine ecosystem with abundance of fish species such as Elops lacerta,
Mugil cephalus, Thais coronata, Periophthalmus papilio, Tympanotonus fuscatus, and Sardinella maderensis.
Unfortunately, many of these fish species are endangered due to constant pollution in the Niger delta regional coastal
environment. As a result, it is important to document some available freshwater and marine water fish species which
will serve as a reference material for both academics and research institutions, should any of the fish species go into
extinction.
1. Introduction
Nigeria’s coastal waters fall within the Guinea Current Large Ecosystem (GCLME), a shared resource by all the coastal
West African countries. The Nigeria coastal area is one of the world’s most productive marine ecosystems with the
following attributes:
The Niger Delta which is located on the Atlantic coast of Southern Nigeria and make up majority of the Nigerian coastal
area, lies within the lower reaches of the Niger river, extending between latitudes 05°19′34″N 06°28′15″E and
5.32611°N 6.47083°E [1,2]). The average monthly temperature of the region is 27°C, and an annual rainfall ranging
from 3000 to 4500 mm. There are two distinct seasons with the wet season occurring from July to September and the
dry season from December to February [3]. The Delta is among the 10 largest in the world, with a coastline of about 450
km which ends at Imo river entrance. The region encompasses an area of 20,000 km2 and is the largest delta in Africa
and the third largest in the world [2, 4, 5].
Corresponding author: Wokeh Okechukwu Kenneth; Email:
Department of Animal and Environmental Biology, Hydrobiology and Fisheries Biology University of Port Harcourt, Port Harcourt,
Rivers State, Nigeria.
Copyright © 2021 Author(s) retain the copyright of this article. This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Liscense 4.0.
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2021, 09(03), 056–084
The Niger Delta region is one of the most prominent regions in Nigeria, endowed with several water bodies that are
distributed as freshwater like rivers, stream, creeks, lakes and estuaries (which interphase fresh and salt water) and
marine water [6]. The region is made of nine states, viz: Abia, Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Cross River, Delta, Edo, Imo, Ondo
and Rivers states (figure 1). The region covers approximately 2370 Square kilometers of mainly flowing fresh waters
and 8600 square km of stagnant swamps [7, 2, 6].
The Niger Delta aquatic ecosystem is greatly blessed with variety of fish species, both fin and shellfishes. Many of the
fish species are endangered due to constant pollution of the Niger Delta regional coastal environment by the petroleum
and allied industries. Due to the danger faced by the fish species in the Niger Delta region, a catalogue that will serve as
a reference material both for the present and future generation in case some of the species present today go into
extinction is needed. It is against this backdrop, we dim it vital to present some available fishes in both fresh and marine
waters in the Niger Delta region due to paucity of information on this area of fisheries, which will serve as baseline
information to students, teachers, researchers and regulatory agencies.
Family: Elopidae
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Distinguishing Features and Morphology: No dorsal spines, Anal spines, lateral line scales ornamented with non-
ramified small tubes. Gray back, silver glossy sides fins tinted yellow.
Family: Mugildae
Habitat Preference: Inhabit sandy and muddy bottoms of wasted waters and estuaries, sometimes found in freshwater.
Food and Feeding Habit: Feeds on Fish and Benthic Crustaceans as well as on Mollusks and Worms (Carnivorous).
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Maximum length of mullet is 120cm, the body of striped mullet is sub-
cylindrical and anteriorly compressed. They have a small terminal mouth with inconspicuous teeth and a blunt nose.
Family: Muricidae
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Food and Feeding Habits: They are omnivorous (meaning they eat both plants and animals).
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: The thick, pointed shell is turbinated and has few whorls. The aperture is
rounded. The outer lip is acute.
Family: Scombridae
Habitat Preference: This is a pelagic, oceanodromous species that inhabits warm waters.
Family: Sciaenidae
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Habitat Preference: Sandy and muddy bottoms in coastal areas with large river run-offs.
Food and Feeding Habit: Chiefly on shrimps and other small crustaceans, detritivore and carnivore.
Reproduction: Oviparous and lay many small demersal eggs on gravel bottoms.
Distinguishing Features: The body is distinctively elongated and slightly compressed. Eyes are large, head short and
lateral line are extended to the tip of caudal fin.
Family: Haemulidae
Food and Feeding Habit: Feeds on other fish, shrimps, crabs, mollusks, annelids, zooplankton and detritus.
Distinguishing Features: Dorsal spines 11-13, dorsal soft rays, 15-16, anal spines, 3, anal soft rays 10.
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Family: Periophthalmidae
Habitat Preference: It is littoral and amphibious in mudflats of estuaries and mangrove swamps.
Food and Feeding Habit: Feeds on arthropods (insects, crabs etc.) on mud surface that is they are carnivorous.
Distinguishing Features: The body is compressed and tapering, while the head is rounded with a sub-terminal mouth.
The stalked dorsally located eye, which may be elevated or retracted are well developed for air vision, close together
and there is a lower eyelid fold.
Economic Importance: It is used as bait for catching bigger fishes and it is also a good source of food fish.
Family: Monodactylidae
Food and Feeding Habit: Small fish, insect larvae, pellets, peas, lettuce, plant debris (Omnivorous).
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Reproduction: Spawning immediately follows a simple courtship where the male circles the female, about 4,000 eggs
are laid, which hatch in 24-60hours.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: A tall, disc-shaped fish with lateral compression. The head is small, as well
as the mouth. The eyes are large and have a black band running throw them; the body is silver to white in colour.
Family: Penaeidae
Habitat Preference: Estuarine biome and usually patches among rocks. Marine; juvenile estuarine.
Food and Feeding Habit: Detritus debris, fragment of many different animals, they are omnivorous.
Reproduction: Oviparous.
Economic importance; It is an abundant species and important to commercial fisheries throughout its ranges.
Family: Elopidae
Habitat Preference: Lives in shallow coastal water with sandy muddy substrate, occasionally enters brackish waters
and downstream of rivers.
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Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Lateral line ornamented with none-ramified small tubes, grey-black, silver
glossy sides, fin tinted yellow
Family: Clupeidae
Habitat Preference: They can handle very low salinities when they travel into estuaries and lagoons and spend most
of their lives near the surface of water.
Food and Feeding Habit: They feed on phytoplankton and fish larvae.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: It is elongated, while also having a variably protruding belly. These fish
have a median number of gill rakers and their upper pectoral fin rays are white on the outer side with a black membrane
in between.
Family: Haemulidae
Habitat Preference: Inhabits coastal waters. Occur over sandy and muddy bottom between 10 and 100m depth but is
more common between 30-50m.
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Reproduction: Oviparous.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Dorsal spines (total):12; dorsal soft rays (total); 11-14, Anal spines: 3,
Anal soft rays: 9. Mouth large and oblique, eyes large, silver grey in colour, fins grey.
Family: Potamididae
Habitat: This species is found in brackish water. They are bottom dwellers.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Characterized by turreted granular and spiny shells with tapering ends.
Conservation Status: No specific conservation measures in place for this species. Less concern.
Family: Eleotridae
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Food and Feeding Habit: Carnivorous and filter feeders. Filter planktons and arthropods.
Reproduction: Oviparous.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Separate pelvic fin, or fused to various extent, mouth never sub-terminal.
Dorsal fin 2-8 flexible spines, characterized further by heavy scalation.
Family: Cichlidae
Habitat: There is a benthopelagic species that feeds on shrimps, bivalves, plankton and detritus.
Food and Feeding Habit: Feed on shrimps, bivalves, plankton and detritus (Omnivorous).
Reproduction: They are oviparous. Substrate guarding of eggs as a form of parental care is done by male and female.
In Casamance, the reproductive activity appears to be at a maximum in March and April
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: The visual coloration of T. guineensis is shiny, dark greenish yellow and
back and flanks becoming lighter in shade near abdomen. The lower lip is white. The tail is bluish-grey. All scales on the
flanks have a black spot at the base.
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Food and Feeding Habits: They feed on fishes, crabs and cephalopods.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Depth of body less than head length, inter-orbital area convex, preopercle
angular.
Family: Claroteidae
Habitat Preference: is a dermersal, potamodromous species. It occurs in shallow water of lakes (less than 4m), over
mud and fine sand bottom, in rivers and in swamps
Food and Feeding Habit: It is an omnivorous fish that feeds on seeds, insects, bivalves and detritus. Feeding becomes
specialized with age on decapods and fish
Reproduction: They are oviparous. They provide parental guard for their young.
Distinguishing Features: Bluish/gray dorsally and ventrally, big-eyes with oval head.
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Family: Penaeidae
Habitat Preference: Penaeus monodon mature and breed only in tropical marine habitats and spend their larval,
juvenile, adolescent and sub-adult stages in coastal estuaries, lagoons or mangrove areas. In the wild, they show marked
nocturnal activity, burrowing into bottom. Season (July-September).
Food and Feeding Habit: Small crabs, shrimps, bivalves and gastropods. They are carnivorous, detritus filter feeders,
omnivorous.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Females can reach approximately 33cm but are typically 25-30 cm long
and weigh 200-320 grams, males are slightly smaller at 20-25 cm long and weighing 100-170 gram.
Family: Sphyraenidae
Habitat Preference: Adult great barracudas live in and around the edges of coral reefs. They tend to avoid brackish
water unless they are getting ready to spawn.
Food and Feeding Habits: They eat other fish, they are piscivorous.
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Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Barracuda is dark blue, dark green or grayon, its upper body with silvery
sides and chalky-white belly. Coloration varies somewhat between species.
Economic Importance: They are popular both as food and game fish.
Family: Arcridae
Habitat: Pre-sediment
Reproduction: Ovoviviparous.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: It has a physical characteristics like laterally compressed bodies enclosed
by a shell in two parts called valves hinged on flexible ligament, the hinge is located in the sigittal plane, the shell is
bilaterally symmetric, interlocking teeth help the valve interlock, they do not have a brain.
Family: Carangidae
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Habitat: It is a pelagic fish. It can be found on reefs and offshore oil rigs. The juvenile can be found closer to shore along
sandy and muddy bottoms. The species may venture into brackish waters and can live in river mouths, but it is typically
found in saltwater up to 140 m in depth.
Food and Feeding Habit: Horse-eye jacks, Carax latus, feed on small fishes, shrimps and other invertebrates, that is
they are carnivorous in nature.
Reproduction: Reproduces via dioecism (sexes are separate), fertilization is external with an unknown spawning
frequency in June, July, and August.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Horse-eye jacks are similar in body shape to other jacks in the family
Carangidae, but their head is not as blunt. Their fins are blackish as opposed to the yellow tinge of crevalle jacks. As
their name indicates, their eyes are very large. These fish have 8-9 dorsal spines, 20-22 dorsal soft rays, 2-3 anal spines
and 16-17 anal soft rays. They have no spots on their pectoral fins. They may have a small spot on their gill covers. Their
scutes (bony plates) tend to be dusky or blackish; their caudal (tail) fin is yellow. Their young have broad blackish bars
on their bodies.
Economics Importance: Game fish, aquarium fish and minor commercial fish.
Family: Channidae.
Habitat Preference: Marginal vegetation and floodplain habitat in the Sudan. Streams, rivers, lakes, lagoons and
marches in flowing water. Widely distributed in marshy habitats and also found in bank vegetation of river channels.
Food and Feeding Habit: Other fishes, copepods and insect larvae. Juveniles feed on prawn, copepods and aquatic
insect larvae, Carnivorous.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Patches of scales present in the gular region. No canine teeth. Transverse
scales 19-24. The fish is depressed anteriorly, relatively long and covered with large scales. Lower jaw is slightly longer
then upper jaw, have dark blotches.
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Family: Clupidae
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Silvery in colour, have a series of scutes (modified, spiny and keeled scales)
along their bellies, deep bluish-green backs. Block to dusky in colour of its peritoneam (the living of the abdominal cavity
Habitat Preference: Anadromous, living in marine systems and spawning in deep swift freshwater, rivers with hard
substrates. It migrates to spawning ground in the spring.
Reproduction: Oviparous
Family: Corbiculidae
Food and Feeding Habit: Feed primarily on phytoplankton (algae) which they filter from the sandy or muddy bottom
of streams, lakes or canals.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: The outside of the shell is normally yellow-green with concentric rings.
The colour can flake, leaving white spots. The shells are lightly purple on the inside.
Habitat Preference: Found in lake and streams of all sizes with silt, mud, sand and gravel substrate. They can tolerate
salinities of up to 13ppt for short period. It is found in moving water because it requires high level of dissolved oxygen.
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Economic Importance: Power plants. It has caused millions of dollars’ worth of damage to intake pipes used in power
and water industry in US. Bait for fish, as source of food.
Reproduction: Self-fertilization. Hermaphrodite, Sperm is released into the water caught by another clam, and brooded
in the gill.
Family: Clariidae
Habitat Preference: Found in lakes, rivers, swamps and floodplain, many of which are subject to seasonal drying. Fresh
water, bottom feeder occasionally feed at surface.
Zoogeography: Native to Africa, Niger and Nile river extending to Southern Africa, Israel, Syria, Europe, Asia.
Food and Feeding Habit: Insect (adults and larvae) worm, gastropods, crustaceans, small fish, aquatic plants and
debris, birds, small mammals. They are Omnivorous.
Economic Importance: For food, also used to control the population of Tilapia when culture together.
Family: Palaemonidae
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blue or orange. 14 somites within cephalothorax covered by large dorsal shield (carapace); carapace smooth and hard,
rostrum long.
Habitat Preference: Larval stage depends on brackish water from Juvenile fresh water.
Food and Feeding Habit: Pieces of worms, snails, clams, fish, piece of rice, wheat, beans, nuts, aquatic-plant and some
fruits. They are omnivorous.
Family: Schilbeidae.
Habitat Preference: Freshwater, demersal, potamodromous species. It is found in lake, delta and riverine habitats.
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Barbels short, 13-16 gill rakers on the lower part of the branchial arch.
Head long with large eyes, anal fin rays 59-73, body generally silver-grey.
Food and Feeding Habit: Zooplankton, invertebrates, they are omnivorous filter feeders.
Family: Mormyridae
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Habitat Preference: It inhabits streams, swamps, rivers and lakes. It is bottom dweller and feeder. They are usually
found in groups.
Food and Feeding Habit: Algae, insect larvae, detritus, omnivorous feeders.
Economic Importance: Food source, good for aquarium, used for animal feeds and as bait for catching bigger fishes.
Family: Mochokidae
Zoogeography: Africa: Chad, Niger (including the Benin),Senegal, Gambia, and Volta basins, also the Nile in the
northern Africa
Habitat Preference: Freshwater; Benthopelagic, occurs in deep waters close to the shore.
Food and Feeding Habit: Feed on, plankton surface insects, chironomid larvae, benthic crustaceans, and mollusks.
They are Omnivorous.
Reproduction: Oviparous
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Family: Eleotridae
Zoogeography: This species is a tropical fish. It has been reported from Senegal to Angola
Habitats: It is a brackish water fish that ascends into freshwaters. It inhabits littoral waters. It is demersal and
amphidromous.
Food and Feeding Habit: Its food items include small crabs, insects and plankton. It is omnivorous feeder.
Family: Cichlidae
Zoogeography:
Habitat Preference: The Nile tilapia thrives on the warmer temperatures commonly found in shallow waters compared
to the colder environment of the deep lake
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Reproduction: The Nile tilapia reproduces through mass spawning of a brood within a nest made by the male. They
are oviparous.
Food and Feeding Habits: Omnivore, feeding on plankton as well as on higher plants.
Family: Alestidae
1.2.11. Scientific Name: Brycinus nurse (Old name Alestes nurse) (Feather fin Fish).
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Anal spines: 0; Anal soft rays: 13 - 18. Diagnosis: fronto-parietal fontanel
absent in adults, sometimes pore-like in juveniles, disappearing with growth; dorsal fin origin at about same level as
pelvic fin insertion; sexual dimorphism affecting anal fin shape; 24-34 lateral line scales; 5.5 scales between lateral line
and dorsal fin; 10-15 anal fin branched rays; 14-20 gill rakers on lower limb of first gill arch; 8 teeth in outer pre-
maxillary row. Snout short, more than 3x head length; head length/snout length 3.6-4.3; 10-11.5 pre-dorsal scales;
flanks without lateral band; adults medium-sized
Zoogeography: Africa: widely distributed in West Africa. In Lower Guinea present in Cross and Mémé rivers.
Habitant Preference: Freshwater; pelagic; pH range: 6.0 - 7.8; dH range: 1 - 30; potamodromous
Food and Feeding Habits: Feeds on zooplankton, Caridina, insects, snails and vegetation, they are omnivore
Family: Mormyridae.
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Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Dorsal spines (total): 0; Dorsal soft rays (total): 59-68; Anal soft rays: 18 -
22. very short snout, massive and rounded; mouth opens before eyes; anal fin base 3.8-4.9x of dorsal fin base; 12-16
scales on caudal peduncle; caudal peduncle height 2.5-3.0x body length; SL 3.4-5.0x body weight.
Reproduction: Oviparous.
Food and Feeding Habits: Feeds on benthos, zooplankton, algae, diatoms, and detritus. They are omnivorous.
Family: Citharinidae
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Dorsal soft rays (total): 17-21; Anal soft rays: 26 - 31. Diagnosis: body
depth 1.8-2.7x and head length 3.0-4.1x SL; caudal peduncle 0.7-1.4x long than deep; short snout, slightly prominent;
snout 0.7-1.6x eye diameter; eye diameter 3.7-6.1x head length; adipose-fin base shorter than distance separating it
from rayed dorsal fin (ratio adipose base/distance to rayed dorsal is 0.5-0.8); pectoral fins 0.5-1.1x head length; cycloid
scales; scale formula 22.5-25.5/77-92/22.5-25.5; 77-92 scales in longitudinal line; 17.5-20.5 scales between lateral line
and pelvic fin; 17-21 dorsal fin branched rays; 26-30 anal fin branched rays.
Reproduction: Oviparous.
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Family: Mochokidae
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Has very long soft rays in its dorsal fin, giving it a sail-like appearance. The
body is olive dotted all over with small black spots except the belly which is white.
Reproduction: Oviparous.
Family: Claroteidae.
Habitat Preference: Chrysichthys nigrodigitatus is a demersal, potamodromous species. It occurs in shallow waters of
lakes (less than 4 m), over mud and fine sand bottom, in rivers and in swamps
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: bluish/gray dorsally and ventrally, big-eyes with oval head
Food and Feeding Habit: Omnivorous, feed on seeds, insects, bivalves and detritus. Feeding becomes specialized with
age and size, larger fish may feed on decapods and fish
Reproduction: Oviparous.
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Family: Clariidae
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: They are recognized by their long-based dorsal and anal fins, which give
them an eel-like appearance. These fishes have slender bodies, a flat bony head, and a broad, terminal mouth with four
pairs of barbels. They also have large accessory gill arches.
Food and Feeding Habits: Feeds on living and dead animal matters. Carnivorous
Economic Importance: Commercial important fish consumed by human, can also be used in the production of fish feed.
Family: Ampullariidae
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Has a relatively high spine (about half the overture height) and a round
shell opening (overture). The umbilicus is small, but deep and the lip is somewhat thickened. The colour varies from
light brown to reddish olive with faint, non-continuous spiral bands.
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Reproduction: Hermaphrodite
Economic Importance: Good for food and the shell is used in artistry and also grinded for fish meal.
Family: Cyprinidae
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: 4 dorsal spines, 11-15 dorsal soft rays, 3 anal spines, 5-8 anal soft rays, 31-
33 vertebrae, body dark and full, rostral lobe is poorly developed, inner surface of lips with transverse fold, presence of
caudal peduncle, gill rakers, 4.5 scales between lateral line and pelvic base. 12-14 dorsal fin branched rays.
Food and Feeding Habit: Bottom feeder, on mud, diatoms and debris; Detritivore
Reproduction: Oviparous
Economic Importance: Good for food, important for commercial fisheries, also used in aquarium.
Family: Mochokidae
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Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Has a hardened head cap that has attached process (humeral process)
which is situated behind the gill opening and pointed towards the posterior. The dorsal fin and pectoral fins have a
hardened first ray which is serrated. Caudal fin is always forked. There is one pair of maxillary burbles, sometimes
having membranes and occasionally branched. The two pairs of mandibular barbells are often branched and can have
nodes attached. The cone-shaped teeth in the upper jaw are short, s-shaped and moveable in the jaw.
Food and Feeding Habit: Insects, crustaceans, mollusks, annelids, seeds and algae; Omnivore
Reproduction: Oviparous
Family: Bagridae
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Dorsal spine is present, 8-12 dorsal soft rays, 13-15 anal soft rays, 48-53
vertebrae, body is more or less elongated, and head is much depressed, smooth above. Supra-lateral eyes with a free
orbital margin. Posterior and anterior nostrils are remote from each other, the posterior being provided with a barbell.
Dorsal fin with smooth spine, lobes of caudal fin often with short filaments. Pelvic fin inserted under 5th or 6th branched
ray of dorsal fin. Lateral line consist of a straight line of tubular elevations, from scapular to the mid of the caudal fin.
Food and Feeding Habit: Feed on insects, crustaceans, mollusks, vegetable matter, preys on small fish; Predatory
Omnivore (Piscivorous)
Reproduction: Oviparous
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Family: Mormyridae
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Has dorsal fin originating in advance of the anal fin and the body deepest
at the origin of the dorsal fin. The chin is slightly elongated with globular appendage. The colour is uniformly light
brown, slightly darker on the back. The anterior rays on the dorsal and anal fins sometimes have trances and darker
bars.
Food and Feeding Habit: Feed on insects, mollusks and crustaceans; Carnivore
Reproduction: Oviparous
Family: Mormyridae
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: the snout is prolonged into a long tubular structure with which it burrows
into the bottom in search of worms and other organisms upon which it feeds. The chin has a small dermal appendage.
Juveniles are light brownish-grey in colour and have two lighter vertical bands on the sides framing a darker bond.
Adults become brownish-yellow, sometimes with a lighter vertical band in front of the dorsal and anal fins.
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Food and Feeding Habit: worms, small fish and insects; carnivorous
Reproduction: oviparous
Family: Mormyridae
Habitat Preference: It inhibits swamps, rain forest, streams, and edges of rivers and lakes which provide vegetative
protection.
Food and Feeding Habit: Chironomid larvae, Zooplankton, nematodes and detritus; Omnivore
Reproduction: Oviparous
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Dorsal fin rays: 22-27; Anal fin rays: 30-36, Upper jaw with 9-13 teeth,
Lower jaw 17-21 teeth. Maximum size: 100 mm SL
Economic Importance: They are consumed by many people, good for aquarium, can be used as baits for fishermen and
animal feed
Family: Mochokidae
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Northeast Africa: It occurs in the White Nile, Sudan, as well as the Blue Nile and Baro River, Ethiopia.
Western Africa: This species is known from basins of the Chad, Niger (plus the Benue), Senegal, Gambia and
Volta.
Habitat Preference: A bottom feeder, it feeds on chironomid larvae, plant remains and mud; freshwater
Distinguishing Features and Morphology: Dorsal spine with prolongation, upper lobe of tail elongated, Tail bright
pink and Body grayish. They have stumpy body, scale less and smooth skin with formidable and serrated spin, an
inferior mouth, a very number of branched barbell and adipose fin. The head is large and fully ossified.
Food and Feeding Habit: Feeds on insect larvae, mollusks, and detritus; Omnivore
Reproduction: Oviparous
2. Conclusion
This catalogue of fish species in Niger Delta Waters serves as a checklist of available fishes in both fresh and salt waters
in Niger Delta that must be safeguarded from the effect of oil and gas industries and other anthropogenic activities
prominent in the coastal water in this area. The catalogue will also serve as a reference material to research scholars,
regulatory agencies and the government should any of these species go into extinction.
Acknowledgments
We wish to acknowledge the efforts of Dr U. I. Daniel, whose inspiration led to this research work. We also convey our
deep appreciation to Mr. Otufu of the Department of Animal and Environmental Biology laboratory, University of Port
Harcourt, who helped in identification of the fishes.
Conflict of interest
There was no conflict of interest among the authors.
Referenc es
[1] World Bank. The Niger River Basin: A Vision for Sustainable Management. The World Geodetic System (WGS).
2005.
[2] Okonkwo CNP, Kumar L, Taylor S. The Niger Delta wetland ecosystem: What threatens it and why should we
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