The Volga pikeperch was first formally
described as
Perca volgensis in 1789 by the
German naturalist,
botanist,
entomologist,
herpetologist, and
malacologist Johann Friedrich Gmelin (1748–1804) with the
type locality given as the
Volga River and the
Ural River in Russia. The Volga pikeperch is part of the European
clade within the genus
Sander which split from a common ancestor with the North American clade, which the
walleye (
S. vitreus) and the
sauger (
S. canadensis) belong to, around 20.8 million years ago. Within the European clade the Volga pikeperch (
S. volgaensis) is the most basal taxon and shares features with the North American clade, such as being a broadcast spawner. In contrast in the
zander (
S. lucioperca) and the estuarine perch (
S. marinus) the males build nests and the female spawn into these nests and the males then guard the eggs and fry. The lineage leading to the zander is thought to have diverged from the common ancestor with the Volga pikeperch circa 13.8 million years ago. ==Status==