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Lepomis or true sunfish is a of from the family in the order . The generic name Lepomis derives from the λεπίς ("scale") and πῶμα ("cover", "plug", "operculum"). The genus' most recognizable species is perhaps the .

Some Lepomis species can grow to a maximum overall length of , though most average around . Many species are sought by as popular , and large numbers are bred and in , , and . They are widely distributed throughout the lakes and river tributaries of the and , and several species have been translocated and flourished around the world, even becoming . Aquarium trade in some Lepomis species is prohibited in for this reason.Przybylski, Mirosław, and Grzegorz Zięba. "Invasive Alien Species Fact Sheet." NOBANIS – Invasive Alien Species Fact Sheet. NOBANIS. NOBANIS, 2011. Web. 5 Jan. 2015. Invasive Alien Species Fact Sheet - Lepomis gibbosus

Lepomis species, among others, are sometimes referred to as , but the term is also used to refer explicitly to the unrelated fish of genus .


Phylogeny
Phylogeny of all Lepomis species based on a partitioned mixed-model Bayesian analysis of a seven gene dataset of mitochondrial and nuclear gene DNA sequences by Near et al. (2005), expanded with fossil species. Subgenera in bold follow Bailey (1938):

*) L. peltastes was not originally included in the analysis by Near et al. (2005) and is included here based on commonly accepted sister relationship to L. megalotis.

**) See section 'Evolutionary History' below for explanation.

***) Phylogenetic position in clade II uncertain. See section 'Fossil record' for clarification.


Evolutionary history
Phylogenetic reconstructions using a combination of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA sequences calibrated with fossils to estimate ages of divergences suggests that the genus Lepomis diverged from the black bass in genus , its sister taxon, about 25 million years ago.
(2025). 9781405133425, Blackwell Publishing Ltd..
The deepest split among currently living species of Lepomis is dated to ~15 million years ago and separates genus Lepomis into two : clade I that leads to the modern bluegill, orange-spotted, green, and warmouth sunfish, and a clade II that includes the modern long-ear, red-breasted, pumpkinseed, redear, and red-spotted sunfish (see section 'Phylogeny' above). The timing of this speciation event roughly corresponds with the Middle Miocene disruption that resulted in increased aridity on the plains of North America and a transition from savannah to grasslands,
(1995). 9780309051279, Washington, DC: The National Academies Press..
although the relevance of these environmental changes to the evolution of Lepomis is unclear.


Fossil record
No fossils unambiguously assigned to genus Lepomis are currently known from the putative stem-lineage that must have existed between 25 and 15 million years ago, spanning most of the .

Currently, four extinct species of Lepomis are known from the fossil record:

There are at least two as yet undescribed fossil species of Lepomis that reach back to the :

  • Lepomis sp. A consists of fragmentary fossils of its lower jaw from the Valentine Formation of Nebraska, dated to 13.5 million years ago, and shows morphological similarities to the modern , although its great age means that this species predates the divergence of any of the living species.
  • Lepomis sp. B was found in deposits from the Ogallala Formation of Kansas, dated to 12 million years ago.

Two other more recent fossil species appear to be closely allied to , and indeed their earliest occurrence may be close to the divergence of the lineage leading to the modern warmouth from other species of Lepomis:

  • Lepomis kansasensis lived 6.6 million years ago in the Ogallala Formation of Kansas, and had teeth, indicating a close relationship to the warmouth.
  • is known from 3.4 to 2.0 million year old deposits in the of Nebraska, and also appears to be closely related to or ancestral to the warmouth on the basis of its preopercle.


Species
There are currently 13 recognized species in this genus:
+ !Image !Species !Common name !Distribution
Lepomis aquilensis (Baird & Girard, 1853)plains longear sunfish
(, 1758)redbreast sunfish
Lepomis cyanellus (Rafinesque, 1819)green sunfish
(, 1758)pumpkinseed
(, 1829)warmouth
(Girard, 1858)orangespotted sunfish
Lepomis macrochirus (Rafinesque, 1819)bluegill
Lepomis marginatus (Holbrook, 1855)dollar sunfish
Lepomis megalotis (Rafinesque, 1820)longear sunfish
Lepomis microlophus (Günther, 1859)redear sunfish
(D. S. Jordan, 1877)redspotted sunfish
Lepomis peltastes (Cope, 1870)northern sunfish
Lepomis punctatus (Valenciennes, 1831)spotted sunfish
(Valenciennes, 1831)swampland longear sunfish
Lepomis symmetricus (S. A. Forbes, 1883)bantam sunfish
Lepomis frequently hybridize and many different hybrid combinations have been observed in the wild. Some of these hybrids include:
  • Lepomis macrochirus × cyanellus (greengill sunfish)
  • Lepomis macrochirus x microlophus (gillcracker)
  • Lepomis cyanellus x gibbosus (pumpgreen sunfish)
  • Lepomis cyanellus x gulosus (green sunfish x warmouth)
  • Lepomis gulosus x macrochirus (warmouth x bluegill)
  • Lepomis macrochirus x megalotis (bluegill x longear sunfish)
  • Lepomis gibbosus x macrochirus (pumpkingill)
  • Lepomis auritus x cyanellus (redbreast x green sunfish)
  • Lepomis microlophus x cyanellus (redear x green sunfish)
  • Lepomis auritus x microlophus (redbreast x redear sunfish)
  • Lepomis macrochirus x punctatus (bluegill x spotted sunfish)
  • Lepomis gibbosus x peltastes (pumpkinseed x northern sunfish)
  • Lepomis megalotis x cyanellus (longear x green sunfish)
  • Lepomis miniatus x punctatus (redspotted x spotted sunfish)

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