I was also trying out the "icthyological" method for photography, and used the situation to figure out where and what I needed to get to do such. I broke two small aquariums (one was already broken), drove to 8 different places looking for another 2.5 gallon (these plastic "package" tank deals have ruined aquaria) without finding one, and finally got around to using a freshly busted 5 gallon, in the dark, illuminated quickly by passing cars to get the shot off, with fish that'd been "fixed" in clove oil without formalin. Ha ha. Not prime (in fact the pictures suck). But you can make out some cool things on these fish, and I thought that was worth sharing.
First is a ghost shiner, Notropis buchanani, which I think is now in the OSUM collection, but was undocumented in the Great Lakes. This guy was in rigor and decay by the time I photo'd him (he and some emerald shiner were with whom I figured out that my jar was just a kill jar, not a fix jar grrrr). So he's kinda blotchy and not exactly pristine.

Next is an exotic to the lakes, at least above Niagra Falls. I'm not sure if it was in Ontario prior to the canals or not... Anyway, this is the rainbow smelt, Osmerus mordax, which has been on the rise toward "invasive" in the other basins of Lake Erie and is starting to show up in the Western Basin. Some folks get their shorts in a bunch about this species, that it's the next round goby or something like that. I think they're just filling the niche vacated by the Coregonids (ciscos) that we over fished and silted out. Probably a similar story for white perch as well, but whatever. They're a cool lookin' fish, and they're danged tasty as "fries with eyes"


Oh yeah, they have this wicked awesome set of teeth on their mandibles and on the tounge...

And lastly, one I'm excited about, the trout-perch, Percopsis omiscomaycus, which likes cool, un-silty water (yeah, what's it doing in the Maumee?). Who knows if these are actually successfully spawning up here, I've found gravid females last year, but that only means they're going through the act. Let's hope this is the return. I'd also wager that they don't NEED cool, un-silty water, they just do a lot better in it. These things are out in the open lake by the 55 gallon drum full.


Hopefully, I'll have much better conditions next time and we'll have some pictures that work well. Maybe I'll even splurge and get some thicker plexi to trap them, the thin stuff just folded in the middle when I was using the larger tank. A 2.5 gallon would be a much better situation tho, I think.
Todd