Image by Joel Sartore

Tennessee Dace | Chrosomus tennesseensis

Tennessee Dace are boldly colored minnows native to Southern Appalachia in the upper Tennessee River drainage and the Holston River system. Their numbers have been in decline due to habitat loss and fragmentation, which is caused by degraded culverts and eroded channels. These culverts were significantly increasing the flow of water causing substrate and debris to be washed out below, causing a waterfall or cascade which act as barriers for fish passage.

Status: IUCN: Vulnerable; USFWS: Not Listed

CFI Status: Propagated at CFI from 2022-Present for development of propagation protocols and restoration. (What do these terms mean?)

Native Range

Green: Current / Orange: Historical

Threats

Deforestation, impoundments, mining, and sedimentation. What do these terms mean?

Tennessee Dace using the false bottom we’ve created to spawn.

Before & after of the habitat created by the Cherokee National Forest Service.

Spawning Habitat Preferences: Springtime spawners in small spring-fed headwater streams that are shaded by woody riparian vegetation and are abundant in in-stream large woody debris. They spawn over clean gravel and are nest associates for larger minnows that build nests such as Creek Chub

In Partnership With: Cherokee National Forest Service

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Streamline Chub

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Whitetail Shiner