Lates
Template:Short description Template:Automatic taxobox
Lates is a genus of freshwater and euryhaline lates perches belonging to the family Latidae. The generic name is also used as a common name, lates, for many of the species.<ref name=FishBase/>
All species are predatory, and the Nile perch (L. niloticus), in particular, has become infamous as an invasive species introduced into the East African Lake Victoria, where many native Haplochromines were driven extinct. In contrast to the widespread Barramundi and Nile perch (though the fish does face threats from human activity), several members of the genus Lates with relatively restricted African or Asian distributions are themselves considered threatened.
EtymologyEdit
The generic name Lates derives from the Latin latēre (to be hidden).
DescriptionEdit
These fishes range in size from less than Template:Convert in maximum overall length, the largest species reaching weights up to Template:Convert.<ref name=FishBase/> They all have the characteristic centropomid shape, with the two-part dorsal fin and general percoid form.
All species are carnivorous, preying on aquatic invertebrates and other fish in a wide variety of habitats.
Distribution and habitatEdit
These fishes are native to freshwater and marine waters of Africa, Asia, the Indian Ocean, and the western Pacific Ocean. Several species are endemic to the Rift Valley lakes in Africa.
TaxonomyEdit
Extant speciesEdit
Currently, 11 recognized species are placed in this genus:<ref name=FishBase>{{#invoke:Cite taxon|main|fishbase|genus=|species=|subspecies=}}</ref>
- Lates angustifrons Boulenger, 1906 (Tanganyika lates)
- Lates calcarifer (Bloch, 1790) (barramundi)
- Lates japonicus Katayama & Y. Taki, 1984 (Japanese lates) (Japanese barramundi)
- Lates lakdiva Pethiyagoda & A. C. Gill, 2012
- Lates longispinis Worthington, 1932 (Rudolf lates)
- Lates macrophthalmus Worthington, 1929 (Albert lates)
- Lates mariae Steindachner, 1909 (bigeye lates)
- Lates microlepis Boulenger, 1898 (forktail lates)
- Lates niloticus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Nile perch)
- Lates stappersii (Boulenger, 1914) (sleek lates)
- Lates uwisara Pethiyagoda & A. C. Gill, 2012
Extinct speciesEdit
Extinct species within this genus include:<ref name=aa>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=":0">Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Template:ExtinctLates arambourgi Stewart & Murray, 2008 - Pliocene/Pleistocene of Ethiopia
- Template:ExtinctLates bispinosus Gaudant & Sen, 1979 - Neogene of Turkey
- ?Template:ExtinctLates croaticus Gorjanović-Kramberger, 1902 - Miocene of Croatia
- ?Template:ExtinctLates gregarius Bannikov, 1992 - late Miocene of Moldova
- ?Template:ExtinctLates macropterus Bassani, 1889 - Oligocene of Italy
- ?Template:ExtinctLates karungae Greenwood, 1951 - Miocene of Kenya
- Template:ExtinctLates odessanus Kovalchuk, Otero, Barkaszi, Murray & Divay, 2023 - latest Miocene of Ukraine<ref name=":1">Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Template:ExtinctLates partschi Heckel, 1856 - mid-Miocene of Austria
- Template:ExtinctLates qatraniensis Murray & Attia 2004 - Early Oligocene of Egypt
Extinct species within this genus lived from the early Oligocene epoch to the present.<ref name=":0" /> Fossils have been found in Africa (Libya, Egypt, Kenya, Tunisia, Chad, Uganda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Niger, and Sudan), Saudi Arabia, and Slovakia.<ref name="aa" /> Earlier specimens from the Eocene are now placed in their own genus, Eolates.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Prehistoric Lates appear to have had significant species diversity in the marine basins of the Mediterranean and Paratethys, but appear to have been significantly affected by salinity fluctuations, leading to their eventual extinction. In the present day, the only surviving Lates in this region are L. niloticus in estuarine habitats in North Africa.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" />