Gobius niger Linnaeus, 1758

Kovačić, Marcelo, Renoult, Julien P., Pillon, Roberto, Svensen, Rudolf, Bogorodsky, Sergey V., Engin, Semih & Louisy, Patrick, 2022, Identification of Mediterranean marine gobies (Actinopterygii: Gobiidae) of the continental shelf from photographs of in situ individuals, Zootaxa 5144 (1), pp. 1-103 : 59-61

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5144.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3D15F4CB-1839-41FC-BECE-BAE2D8F87CB5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6601542

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/616687CB-3F0F-FF9E-FF76-F904FAEDFD67

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gobius niger Linnaeus, 1758
status

 

Gobius niger Linnaeus, 1758 View in CoL ( Fig. 56 View FIGURE 56 )—Black Goby

Gobius niger Linnaeus, 1758: 262 View in CoL View Cited Treatment ; no type locality.

Size. Known adult size about 15–18 cm total length.

Morphology. D V–VII + I,11–13; A I,10–13; P 15–20. Large goby with a relatively stocky body, proportionately large head with a short and steep snout. Caudal peduncle deep, almost as deep as body. The first dorsal fin higher or about equal to the second, mature males with long and pointed fin with elongated spines (third and fourth spines longest). Pectoral-fin free rays moderately developed. Caudal fin rounded. Rows of sensory papillae well developed and clearly visible on the nape. Scales present on body and on predorsal area, usually visible in photographs at least on body (Miller 1986).

Live coloration. Body ground coloration variable, usually light cream or gray, sometimes greenish ( Fig. 56a & 56b View FIGURE 56 ), to black in nesting males ( Fig. 56c View FIGURE 56 ). In light-colored individuals, the body has dark mottling on the back, 5 or 6 black midlateral blotches and becomes white ventrally with few scattered black dots. Head with a white preorbital bar and a black suborbital bar, lips mottled dark gray or brown. Oculoscapular line limited to three inconspicuous black or brown dashes. Membrane of first dorsal fin light blue-green, or light gray, or light reddish (blackish in nesting males) in the distal half, reddish with 3 irregular white horizontal bands in the proximal half. One black blotch often visible distally on the first membrane of each dorsal fin or just on the first dorsal fin ( Fig. 56a View FIGURE 56 ); rarely a black spot is visible at the lower posterior corner of the first dorsal fin. Sensory papillae black and well visible on the nape ( Renoult et al. 2022).

Similar species. Gobius roulei , G. couchi .

Habitat. Infralittoral and circalittoral species known from 1–96 m depth, mostly on sheltered or muddy soft bottoms and coastal lagoons (Miller 1986; Patzner 2021).

Geographic distribution. Northeastern Atlantic, from the Baltic Sea to Canary Islands and in the whole Mediterranean (Miller 1986), the Black Sea ( Tserkova et al. 2016) and the Sea of Azov (Miller 1986) .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Perciformes

Family

Gobiidae

Genus

Gobius

Loc

Gobius niger Linnaeus, 1758

Kovačić, Marcelo, Renoult, Julien P., Pillon, Roberto, Svensen, Rudolf, Bogorodsky, Sergey V., Engin, Semih & Louisy, Patrick 2022
2022
Loc

Gobius niger

Linnaeus, C. 1758: 262
1758
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF