Trimma caudomaculatum

Trimma caudomaculatum
Male from Rabaul, New Britain, 21.5 mm (0.85 in)
Not evaluated (IUCN 3.1)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Gobiidae
Subfamily: Gobiinae
Genus: Trimma
Species: T. caudomaculatum
Binomial name
Trimma caudomaculatum
Yoshino & Araga, 1975

Trimma caudomaculatum is a species of gobies from the Western Pacific. Like other members of the genus, they are usually found in large schools in the sloping or vertical drop-offs at coral reef edges.

Taxonomy

Trimma caudomaculatum belongs to the Trimma tevegae species group of the dwarfgoby genus Trimma. It is included in the true goby subfamily Gobiinae in the goby family Gobiidae. It was first described as Trimma caudomaculata (in error) by the Japanese ichthyologists Tetsuo Yoshino and Chūichi Araga from specimens recovered from southern Japan.[1]

In 2005, the ichthyologist Richard Winterbottom examined specimens of Trimma caudomaculatum (specific name corrected for gender agreement) and compared them with specimens of Trimma tevegae. Based on morphology, he concluded that they belonged to the same species, and thus synonymized Trimma caudomaculatum into Trimma tevegae.[2] However, he reversed this opinion after a 2011 phylogenetic study on the genus Trimma. Trimma caudomaculatum is now again considered to be a separate valid species, though still closely related to Trimma tevegae. The study also revealed that Trimma tevegae may be a cryptic species complex.[1]

Distribution

Trimma caudomaculatum can be found in the Western Pacific coral reefs. Specimens have been recovered from Japan and Palau.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Richard Winterbottom, Robert H. Hanner, Mary Burridge, & Margaret Zur (2014). "A cornucopia of cryptic species - a DNA barcode analysis of the gobiid fish genus Trimma (Percomorpha, Gobiiformes)" (PDF). ZooKeys 381: 79111. doi:10.3897/zookeys.381.6445. PMC 3950426. PMID 24624015.
  2. Richard Winterbottom (2005a). "On the status of Trimma tevegae and Trimma caudomaculata (Gobiidae).". Aqua, International Journal of Ichthyology 10 (2): 5156.

External links

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