Adriatic sturgeon (Acipenser naccarii)

General data
- Main name: Adriatic sturgeon
- Climates: Temperate, Subpolar
- Habitat: Anadromous
- Native: Europe
- Distribution: Bojana, Neretva, Po River, Vjosa
Classification
- Genus: Acipenser - Greater sturgeons
- Family: Acipenseridae - Sturgeons
- Order: Acipenseriformes - Sturgeons and Paddlefish
- Class: Chondrostei - Sturgeons
- Superclass: Osteichthyes - Bony fishes
Description
The Adriatic sturgeon (Acipenser naccarii) is a species of fish in the family Acipenseridae. It is native to the Adriatic Sea and large rivers which flow in it of Albania, Greece, Montenegro, Bosnia and Hercegovina, Croatia, and Italy. Specimens can be seen in several public aquariums, such as the Milan Aquarium, Aquarium Finisterrae, Aquarium of the Po, and Oasis of Sant\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'Alessio in Lombardy. Description The Adriatic sturgeon reaches a maximum length exceeding 2 m (6.6 ft); the published maximum weight was 25 kg (55 lb), but large wild fish recently caught were evidently exceeding 40 kg (88 lb). Like other surgeons, it has an elongated body, heterocercal tail, partially cartilaginous skeleton, naked skin and longitudinal series of bony scutes on the body. The rostrum is tendentially conical and rather short (1/3 of the head), the head is broad and rounded at the apex, with a protractile mouth whose lower lip is thin with a central cleft, and four barbels (circular section) which are closer to the tip of the snout than they are to the mouth. The series of longitudinal scutes are five: dorsal (1 series, 10–14 scutes), lateral (2 series, one per side, 30–42 scutes each) and ventral series (2 series, one per side, 8–11 scutes each). The dorsal fin has no spines and 36 to 48 soft rays, and the anal fin has 24 to 31 soft rays. The dorsal colouring is olive-brown, the flanks are paler and the underside white. Juveniles have a flattened and triangular rostrum, with a distinctive colouring on the back, dark brown with wide paler areas casually distributed. Adriatic sturgeon was reported as very similar to the critically endangered European sea sturgeon (Acipenser sturio), once simpatric in the Adriatic sea, but distinctive characters for A. naccarii are:
- shorter and stocky snout;
- darker back, brown;
- less and lesser scutes in the lateral series;
- larger mouth;
- barbels closer to the tip of the snout (in A. sturio they are closer to the mouth);
- the mouth ends just after the front end of the operculum (in A. sturio it ends in the middle of the operculum);
- smaller dimensions.