Vanderhorstia mertensi

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Vanderhorstia mertensi
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Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Gobiiformes
Family: Gobiidae
Genus: Vanderhorstia
Species:
V. mertensi
Binomial name
Vanderhorstia mertensi

Vanderhorstia mertensi, Mertens' shrimp goby or the slender shrimp goby, is a ray-finned fish species native to the Red Sea, Japan, Papua-New Guinea and the Great Barrier Reef. Male individuals can reach a length of 11 cm in total.[2] In 2008 a specimen was collected in the Mediterranean Sea, in Gulf of Fethiye on the coast of southern Turkey, where it was found on sandy bottoms in the vicinity of beds of sea grass such as Zostera spp., Posidonia oceanica and in the burrows of the alpheid shrimps and Alpheus rapacida. It is thought that the gobies most likely entered the Mediterranean through the Suez Canal by Lessepsian migration from the Red Sea but the possibility of transportation in ships' ballast waters cannot be excluded.[3] It was recorded off Israel in 2013, confirming that its origin was as a Lessepsian migrant.[4] The specific name honours the German herpetologist Robert Mertens (1894-1975), the former director of the Naturmuseum Senckenberg in Frankfurt, from whom the author, Klausewitz, learnt about the biological and ecological view of modern systematics and taxonomy.[5]

References[]

  1. ^ Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2018). "Vanderhorstia mertensi" in FishBase. June 2018 version.
  2. ^ Lieske, E. y R. Myers, 1994. Collins Pocket Guide. Coral reef fishes. Indo-Pacific & Caribbean including the Red Sea. Harper Collins Publishers, 400 p.
  3. ^ Murat Bilecenoglu; Mehmet Baki Yokeş & Ahmet Eryigit (2008). "First record of Vanderhorstia mertensi Klausewitz, 1974 (Pisces, Gobiidae) in the Mediterranean Sea". Aquatic Invasions. 3 (4): 475–478. doi:10.3391/ai.2008.3.4.21.
  4. ^ Menachem Goren; Nir Stern & Bella S. Galil (2013). "Bridging the gap: first record of Mertens' prawn-goby Vanderhorstia mertensi in Israel". Marine Biodiversity Records. 6: e63. doi:10.1017/s1755267213000419.
  5. ^ Christopher Scharpf & Kenneth J. Lazara (24 July 2018). "Order GOBIIFORMES: Family GOBIIDAE (r-z)". The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database. Christopher Scharpf and Kenneth J. Lazara. Retrieved 16 September 2018.


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