Sufflogobius bibarbatus

Bearded Goby
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Gobiidae
Subfamily: Gobiinae
Genus: Sufflogobius
Species: S. bibarbatus
Binomial name
Sufflogobius bibarbatus
von Bonde, 1923

The Bearded Goby or Pelagic Goby (Sufflogobius bibarbatus[1] is a fish in the family Gobiidae. Its genus Sufflogobius is monotypic.

Contents

Description

It reaches a maximum length of 17 centimeters (6.7 in). It has 7 dorsal spines and 12-13 dorsal soft rays. It has a single anal spine and 12-13 anal soft rays. Its fins are dusky to black in color.[1]

Range and habitat

This goby is demersal, inhabiting depths of 0–340 metres (0–1,120 ft) in subtropical waters ranging from 11–15 °C (52–59 °F). Its range is the Eastern Atlantic, by Namibia and South Africa.[1]

The bearded goby is usually found offshore but was also recorded in shore pools. Juveniles are epipelagic, while adults migrate to deeper waters, and large adults are only recorded from demersal trawls.[1]

The gobies can stay on the ocean floor for at least 10 to 12 hours at a time, a de-oxygenated "toxic sludge" rich in hydrogen sulfide H2S where hardly anything lives except bacteria and nematodes When settled on the bottom, they remain alert, showing rapid escape responses. They use the toxic mud as a refuge. Their population is growing despite the fact that they are now the main prey species in this unusual ecosystem.[2]

Feeding

In 2010 was observed to feed on a species of jellyfish which was understood to be its main predator.[2] Jellies provide up to 1/3 of the fish's diet. It hides from mackerel amongst the jellies' stinger-covered tentacles when it rises from the seafloor for nighttime feeding.[3]

Predation

Fishes, penguins, Cape cormorants, and fur seals and jellies eat this fish.[1]

This goby hides from predators within jelly tentacles when it rises to feed and reoxygenate its blood.

Although targeted by purse seines, it may also be caught incidentally in trawls.

References

Miller, P.J. 1990

Footnotes