Gobionellinae
Gobionellinae | |
---|---|
Gymnogobius petschiliensis | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Actinopterygii |
Order: | Perciformes |
Suborder: | Gobioidei |
Family: | Gobiidae |
Subfamily: | Gobionellinae Bleeker, 1874 |
Genera | |
55 |
The Gobionellinae are a subfamily of fish in the family Gobiidae, the gobies. Members of Gobionellinae mostly inhabit estuarine and freshwater habitats; the main exception is the genus Gnatholepis, which live with corals in marine environments.[1] The subfamily is distributed in tropical and temperate regions around the world with the exception of the northeastern Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Ponto-Caspian region. It includes around 370 species and 55 genera:[2] Wikipedia articles about genera list about 389 species.
Genera
- Acanthogobius
- Amblychaeturichthys
- Astrabe
- Awaous
- Brachygobius
- Caecogobius
- Calamiana
- Chaenogobius
- Chaeturichthys
- Chasmichthys
- Chlamydogobius
- Chonophorus
- Clariger
- Clevelandia
- Ctenogobius
- Eucyclogobius
- Eugnathogobius
- Eutaeniichthys
- Evorthodus
- Gillichthys
- Gnatholepis
- Gobioides
- Gobionellus
- Gobiopterus
- Gymnogobius
- Hemigobius
- Ilypnus
- Lepidogobius
- Lethops
- Leucopsarion
- Luciogobius
- Mistichthys
- Mugilogobius
- Oligolepis
- Oxyurichthys
- Paedogobius
- Pandaka
- Papuligobius
- Parawaous
- Pseudogobiopsis
- Pseudogobius
- Pterogobius
- Quietula
- Redigobius
- Rhinogobius
- Sagamia
- Schismatogobius
- Stenogobius
- Stigmatogobius
- Suruga
- Synechogobius
- Tamanka
- Triaenopogon
- Tridentiger
- Tukugobius
- Typhlogobius
References
- ↑ Larson, H. K. and D. J. Buckle. (2012). A revision of the goby genus Gnatholepis Bleeker (Teleostei, Gobiidae, Gobionellinae), with description of a new species. Zootaxa 3529: 1–69.
- ↑ F. Pezold (2011). "Systematics of the Family Gobionellidae". In R. Patzner; et al. The Biology of Gobies (PDF). Science Publishers, Inc. ISBN 978-1-57808-436-4.
External links
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