Pomatoschistus quagga ( Heckel, 1837 )

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 : 82

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.6958591

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/616687CB-3F64-FFF3-FF76-FF11FDC7FC09

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Pomatoschistus quagga ( Heckel, 1837 )
status

 

Pomatoschistus quagga ( Heckel, 1837) View in CoL ( Fig. 70 View FIGURE 70 )—Quagga Goby

Gobius quagga Heckel, 1837: 150 View in CoL , Pl. 9 (figs. 5–6); type locality: Mediterranean Sea, Italy, Sicily, Palermo .

Size. Maximum size 4.6 cm total length (Miller 1986).

Morphology. D VI (VI–VII) + I,9; A I,8–9; P 15 (Miller 1986). Small goby with subcylindrical body, laterally compressed towards caudal fin. Small head with short pointed snout. Eyes lateral. Caudal peduncle long and slender, clearly lower than body depth. Dorsal fins of similar height, the first dorsal fin with more or less rounded margin and no elongated spines. Caudal fin truncate to slightly emarginate. Scales more or less visible on body from reticulate pattern of pigmentation along scale edges.

Live coloration. Background color pale beige to light gray, sometimes partly translucent, with variable dark or white patterns. When discernible, vertical black streaks (4–5 in males, 3 in females), restricted to the ventral two-thirds of body, typical for this species. Often 5 pale to golden dorsal saddles, the first, small and often faint, below first dorsal fin, the fifth just above the dark midlateral triangular blotch at caudal-fin base ( Fig. 70 View FIGURE 70 ). In translucent individuals, 4 deep elongated dark blotches run along the vertebral column (in addition to the caudal spot). Cheeks usually pale without dark markings. A dark, reddish or pinkish oblique stripe on gill cover, sometimes bifurcating on its lower part, somewhat reminiscent of the Y-mark of P. bathi .

Similar species. Pomatoschistus bathi , P. knerii , Pseudaphya ferreri .

Habitat. Infralittoral species observed between 2–35 m depth, often in schools of ten to several hundred specimens, swimming up to 1 m above ground or resting on the substrate. They can be found on bedrock with macroalgae, more or less covered with sand, on coarse to muddy sand, or near Posidonia seagrass beds ( Kovačić 2003, Louisy, unpublished data).

Geographic distribution. A Mediterranean species, known along the north coast from Alboran Sea to Aegean Sea (summarized by Patzner 2021) .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Actinopterygii

Order

Perciformes

Family

Gobiidae

Genus

Pomatoschistus

Loc

Pomatoschistus quagga ( Heckel, 1837 )

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

Gobius quagga

Heckel, J. J. 1837: 150
1837
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