Stout body with a moderately compressed and slightly arched back. It has a nipple-like projection at the middle of its lower lip. The back is brown-olive with silvery sides fading to a whitish belly. The fins are opaque, except in older fish. Breeding males develop tiny tubercules on the body. River Carpsucker is the largest of the carpsuckers with adults commonly 12- to 18-inches long and weigh 1- to 3-pounds. Individual fish weighing over 10-pounds have been reported.
Algae, protozoans, small crustaceans, aquatic insects, aquatic worms and mollusks
- No results found
The River Carpsucker is highly adaptable to variable habitats, but prefers large, silty rivers with slower-moving current over sand or silt bottoms. It also lives in the smaller creeks and thrives in river impoundments.
Adults become sexually mature at ages 2 and 3, depending upon sex. This fish spawns late in the spring at water temperatures of 65 to 75 degrees. Spawning occurs in large fish groups in flowing water over gravel and sandy bottoms. No defined spawning peak occurs as females do not ripen at the same time. Some females might spawn more than once per year. The adhesive eggs are broadcast at random. An average female produces over 100,000 eggs. Incubation takes 8 to 15 days. Average body length at each year of life is: 1- 6.8-inches, 2- 11.0-inches, 3- 14.4-inches, 4- 17.3-inches, 5- 17.4-inches and 6- 18.0-inches. Fish more than six years old are seldom seen, although River Carpsuckers up to 10 years of age have been reported.
Recent stream sampling information is available from Iowa DNR's biological monitoring and assessment program.
Widely distributed and abundant in Iowa; common in nearly all of the large interior rivers, as well as in the Mississippi and Missouri rivers and most river impoundments.
See our most recent distribution data for this species on the Iowa DNR's Bionet application.
Pool 19, Mississippi River
Red Rock Reservoir
Pool 18, Mississippi River
Pool 16, Mississippi River
Pool 17, Mississippi River
Coralville Reservoir
Saylorville Reservoir
West Okoboji Lake
Tuttle Lake
Lake Macbride
Big Creek Lake
DeSoto Bend at DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge
Roberts Creek Lake
Blue Heron Lake (Raccoon River Park)
Big Sioux River
Middle River
East Nishnabotna River
West Nishnabotna River
Skunk River (Rose Hill to Coppock)
Iowa River (Marshalltown to Coralville Lake)
Little Sioux River (state line to Linn Grove)
Grays Lake
Prairie Park Fishery
Iowa River (Iowa Falls to Marshalltown)
Wapsipinicon River (Oxford Junct to Mississippi R)
Missouri River (Sioux City to Little Sioux)
Missouri River (Council Bluffs to state line)
South Skunk River (Cambridge to Pella)
Little Sioux River (Correctionville to Missouri R)
Des Moines River (Stratford to Saylorville Lake)
Cedar River (La Porte City to Cedar Rapids)
Cedar River (Cedar Rapids to Moscow)
Missouri River (Little Sioux to Council Bluffs)
Wapsipinicon River (Troy Mills to Oxford Junction)
East Fork Des Moines (Algona to Humboldt)
Des Moines River (Saylorville to Red Rock)
English River
Des Moines River (Farmington to Keokuk)
Des Moines Water Works Recharge Basins
Cedar River (Moscow to Columbus Junction)
North Raccoon River (Perry to Van Meter)
Iowa River (Columbus Junction to Mississippi R)
Iowa River (Coralville Lake to River Junction)
Mohawk Park Lake
Jay Carlson Pit (west)
Petersons Pit, West
Seminole Valley Park Lakes