Identification of Mediterranean marine gobies (Actinopterygii: Gobiidae) of the continental shelf from photographs of in situ individuals
Author
Kovačić, Marcelo
marcelo@prirodoslovni.com
Author
Renoult, Julien P.
jurenoult@gmail.com
Author
Pillon, Roberto
robertopillon@gmail.com
Author
Svensen, Rudolf
rudolf@uwphoto.no
Author
Bogorodsky, Sergey V.
ic187196@yandex.ru
Author
Engin, Semih
engin.semih@gmail.com
Author
Louisy, Patrick
marcelo@prirodoslovni.com
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-06-01
5144
1
1
103
http://zoobank.org/3d15f4cb-1839-41fc-bece-bae2d8f87cb5
journal article
112019
10.11646/zootaxa.5144.1.1
c1fa17ee-253d-40e6-8b2e-f6391f845414
1175-5326
6601561
3D15F4CB-1839-41FC-BECE-BAE2D8F87CB5
Pomatoschistus microps
(
Krøyer, 1838
)
(
Fig. 66
)—Common Goby
Gobius microps
Krøyer, 1838: 172
, Pl. 102 (fig. 3);
type
locality:
England
,
Somersetshire
,
Weston-super-Mare
.
Size. Maximum size
6.4 cm
total length (Miller 1986).
Morphology. D VI(V–VII) + I,8–11;A I,7–10; P 15–20 (Miller 1986). Moderately small goby with subcylindrical body, laterally compressed towards caudal fin, head slightly depressed and moderately large. Snout moderately large and pointed. Eyes dorsolateral, interorbital space moderately narrow. Caudal peduncle long and slender, clearly lower than body depth. Dorsal fins of similar height, the first dorsal fin with more or less rounded margin and no elongated spines. Caudal fin rounded. Scales present on body, sometimes visible on photographs at least dorsally.
Predorsal area, nape and most of the area under the first dorsal fin naked.
Live coloration. Background color light gray to beige, with many small, irregular, white or more or less dark dots and spots. Depending on the environment, light colors may prevail, with almost no recognizable patterns (
Fig. 66b
). Or there can be more contrasting patterns:
usually 5, sometimes ill-defined whitish dorsal saddles
, 1 below first dorsal-fin, 2 below second dorsal fin, 2 on caudal peduncle (
Fig. 66a
), and
in some instances, a narrower and often fainter sixth saddle on nape above pectoral-fin base
; sometimes a midlateral series of dark blotches, often ill defined; in some instances, a deep (i.e., not superficial) oblique blackish blotch between abdominal cavity and base of first dorsal fin.
Typically 2 suborbital dark bars
, one from anterior edge of eye to upper lip, a second one, less obvious and more irregular, from rear edge of eye to just behind corner of mouth (
Fig. 66a
). Sometimes a whitish dot on nape, just behind eyes, more or less edged in dark pigment (quite similar to
P. marmoratus
and
Deltentosteus quadrimaculatus
). In males, first dorsal fin with alternate red-brown and pale longitudinal stripes, and an
elongate black or bluish spot in its rear part, but not close to the edge
(
Fig. 66a
).
Similar species.
Pomatoschistus adriaticus
,
P
.
marmoratus
,
P
.
minutus
.
Habitat. Infralittoral species, on soft bottoms from a few centimeters to
10 m
depth, mainly in brackish, low salinity water (
Renoult
et al
. 2016
;
Patzner 2021
).
Geographic distribution. Mediterranean and Atlantic Ocean. Restricted in the Mediterranean to the northwestern coast of the western Mediterranean (Miller 1986). The easternmost and southernmost Mediterranean records are from Sicily (Tiralongo
et al
. 2019). In the Atlantic Ocean, known from the Canary Islands to
Norway
(Miller 1986).