Clinocottus analis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Clinocottus analis
Wooly Sculpin (Clinocottus analis) (c7399072-950e-4faf-b8a1-85e1845d1fab).png
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
C. analis
Binomial name
Clinocottus analis
(Girard, 1858)

Clinocottus analis is a species of fish in the family Cottidae, one of the families of sculpins. It is known commonly as the woolly sculpin in English and the charrasco lanudo in Spanish.[1] It is native to the eastern Pacific Ocean, where it occurs along the coastline of California and Baja California.[1]

This fish reaches up to 18 centimeters in length.[1]

This species lives on the seabed of intertidal waters up to 18 meters deep.[1] It is commonly found in tide pools amidst algaes, but it leaves the tide pool area at will.[1] It can breathe air and has been known to survive out of water for up to 24 hours.[2]

The diet of this species includes mainly crustaceans, especially amphipods, as well as fish eggs and larvae, polychaetes, and molluscs. Most of its food items are light-colored or clear, suggesting that these are easiest for the fish to see against the dark background of its habitat.[3]

This fish has green blood plasma, the color caused by biliverdin tightly bound in protein complexes.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e Froese, R. and D. Pauly, Eds. Clinocottus analis. FishBase. 2015.
  2. ^ Martin, K. L. (1991). Facultative aerial respiration in an intertidal sculpin, Clinocottus analis (Scorpaeniformes: Cottidae). Physiological Zoology 64(5) 1341-55.
  3. ^ Mollick, R. S. (1970). Food habits of Clinocottus analis (Girard).[permanent dead link] California Fish and Game Volume 56 133-134.
  4. ^ Fang, L. and J. Bada. (1988) A special pattern of haem catabolism in a marine fish, Clinocottus analis, with green blood plasma. Journal of Fish Biology 33(5) 775–780.

External links[]

  • Woolly Sculpin (Clinocottus analis). Photo Gallery: Natural History of Orange County, California and Nearby Places. School of Biological Sciences. University of California, Irvine.

Further reading[]


Retrieved from ""