
Amblyopinae - Wikipedia
Amblyopinae is a subfamily of elongated mud-dwelling gobies commonly called eel gobies or worm gobies; it has been regarded as a subfamily of the family Gobiidae, while the 5th edition Fishes of the World classifies it as a subfamily of the family Oxudercidae. [1]
Chromosome-level genome assembly and annotation of eel goby
2024年2月2日 · The eel goby (Odontamblyopus rebecca) (Fig. 1), which belongs to the genus Odontamblyopus (Gobiidae: Amblyopinae) 2, is an eel-like benthic burrowing fish that lives mainly in warm waters such...
Taenioides cirratus - Wikipedia
Taenioides cirratus, known as the bearded worm goby, is a species of worm goby native to the Indian Ocean and the western Pacific Ocean from islands offshore of eastern Africa to New Caledonia and from Japan to Australia.
Odontamblyopus lacepedii - Wikipedia
Odontamblyopus lacepedii, also known as warasubo, is a species of eel goby found in muddy-bottomed coastal waters in China, Korea and Japan. This species excavates elaborate vertical burrows up to 90 centimetres (35 in) long in the sea bed.
Molecular and Morphological Analyses Suggest Cryptic Diversity of Eel …
2022年11月29日 · The eel goby, genus Taenioides (Gobiidae: Amblyopinae) are endemic to coastal waters from South Africa eastward to Fiji (Murdy and Randall, 2002). These small to medium-sized muddy-bottoms-dwelling marine species are characterized by several conservative external morphology such as their elongated body, small eyes covered with skin, and ...
Records of the eel-goby, Taenioides snyderi (Actinopterygii ...
Taenioides Lacepède, 1800, a genus of mud-dwelling eel-gobies inhabiting bays and estuaries, is characterized by dermal folds on the scaleless head and body, barbels on the chin, the first and second dorsal fin connected, the posteriormost rays of the dorsal and anal fins unbranched (rarely branched), and a Y-shaped second anal-fin ...
Purple Eelgoby, Taenioides purpurascens (De Vis, 1884)
The eel gobies can be recognised by their elongate, scaleless body, tiny eyes, upturned mouths, and long-based dorsal and anal fins. Identification Distribution
Cryptic diversity of the eel goby, genus Taenioides (Gobiidae ...
The eel goby, genus Taenioides (Gobiidae: Amblyopinae), inhabits muddy bottoms of estuaries or shallow areas of seas in the Indo-Pacific Ocean. Among congeners, T. cirratus ( Blyth, 1860 ) has been thought to be distributed in Japan, but taxonomic confusions remain as …
A Redescription of the Eel Goby Trypauchenopsis (Gobiidae
EEL gobies are elongate, mud-dwelling fishes of the Indo-West Pacific region commonly found near river mouths and mangrove forests. Eel gobies comprise 12 genera and 23 species (Murdy, 2011), including Taenioides, a genus of current interest to us.
Cryptic Diversity of the Eel Goby, Genus Taenioides (Gobiidae
The eel goby, genus Taenioides (Gobiidae: Amblyopinae), inhabits muddy bottoms of estuaries, mangrove swamps, and inner bays from South Africa to East Asia (Murdy and Randall, 2002). This group is morphologically unique among Gobiidae, having an elongate body, small eyes covered with skin, and numerous distinct dermal folds, lobes, or barbels ...