Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Loach goby

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Family
  
Rhyacichthyidae

Genus
  
Rhyacichthys

Order
  
Perciformes

Class
  
Actinopterygii

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Species

Loach goby httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Sicyopterus japonicus, Rhyacichthyidae, Stiphodon, Perciformes, Eleotris oxycephala

rhyacichthys aspro loach goby


The loach goby, Rhyacichthys aspro, is a goby belonging to the family Rhyacichthyidae. It is not fished commercially.

Contents

loach goby rhyacichthys aspro


Taxonomy

The loach goby is one of the two species classified under the genus Rhyacichthys in the family Rhyacichthyidae.

Thacker and Hardman's study of the molecular phylogeny of gobies indicates the loach goby is the most primitive member of the Gobioidei.

Description

The loach goby is 25–32 cm long. It has eight dorsal spines, eight or 9 soft dorsal rays, one anal spine, and eight or 9 anal rays. The head is flattened vertically, with a snout and small eyes. The mouth is on the underside and has a fleshy upper lip. The body is laterally compressed toward the slightly forked tail; it has a well-developed lateral line system. The pelvic fins are separate, with enlarged musculature. In colour, it is light brown, with darker, longitudinal stripes on its flanks. Also, dark stripes occur on the dorsal, caudal, and pectoral fins.

Distribution and habitat

The loach goby lives in tropical waters between 24°N and 13°S in both marine and freshwater environments, in the western Pacific Ocean. It can be found in steep coastal streams.

Habits

The loach goby normally clings to rocks in fast-flowing streams, using the rocks as hiding places when threatened. It makes swift darting movements. It eats the algae growing on the rock surfaces.

References

Loach goby Wikipedia