Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Oblique swimming triplefin

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Perciformes

Genus
  
Forsterygion

Higher classification
  
Forsterygion

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Tripterygiidae

Scientific name
  
Forsterygion maryannae

Rank
  
Species

Similar
  
Forsterygion, Yellow‑and‑black triplefin, Threefin blenny, Yaldwyn's triplefin, Variable triplefin

Oblique swimming triplefin meaning


The oblique-swimming triplefin, Forsterygion maryannae, is a triplefin, found along the north east coast of the North Island of New Zealand from depths of about 5 m to 50 m. They are the only triplefins not to spend most of their time resting on the bottom, instead swimming in loose schools of up to hundreds of individuals above rocky reefs. When swimming their head is higher than the tail, giving rise to their common name.

Contents

Its length is between 5 and 8 cm. The body is orange-brown with a red tinged head, a black eye, and a wide black lengthwise stripe on each flank. Oblique-swimming triplefins are planton feeders taking their tiny copepod and euphausid crustacean food in mid-water.

What does oblique swimming triplefin mean


References

Oblique-swimming triplefin Wikipedia