Oxudercidae

Oxudercidae is a family of gobies which consists of four subfamilies which were formerly classified under the family Gobiidae. The family is sometimes called the Gobionellidae, but Oxudercidae has priority. The species in this family have a cosmopolitan distribution in temperate and tropical areas and are found in marine and freshwater environments, typically in inshore, euryhaline areas with silt and sand substrates.[2]

Oxudercidae
Gobioides buchanani
Oxuderces dentatus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Gobiiformes
Family: Oxudercidae
Günther, 1861[1]
Synonyms
  • Gobionellidae

The Oxudercidae includes 86 genera, which contain around 600 species. This family has many species which occur in fresh water, and a number of species found on wet beaches and are able to live for a number of days out of water. The family includes the mudskippers, which include species that are able to move over land with quite quickly. They have eyes located on the top of their heads on short stalks. They are capable of elevating or retracting them, and they can see well out of water. One species, Gillichthys mirabilis, usually stays in the water, but surfaces to gulp air when the oxygen levels in the water are low; it holds the air in its buccopharynx, which is highly vacularised to facilitate respiratory exchange.[2]

Subfamilies

These subfamilies are included in the Oxudercidae:[2]

gollark: There are so *many* of them.
gollark: If I were styro I would probably just have pings here turned off honestly.
gollark: Probably. I imagine the windows have filters on them.
gollark: Are more powerful lasers actually different enough to less powerful ones (apart from... burning stuff more, needing more eye protection, and being more expensive) to make you get un-bored?
gollark: So a blindfold?

References

  1. Richard van der Laan; William N. Eschmeyer & Ronald Fricke (2014). "Family-group names of Recent fishes". Zootaxa. 3882 (2): 001–230.
  2. Nelson, JS; Grande, TC & Wilson, MVH (2016). Classification of fishes from Fishes of the World 5th Edition. Wiley. p. 330. ISBN 9781119220824.
  3. Bailly N, ed. (2015). "Amblyopinae Günther, 1861". FishBase. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  4. Bailly N, ed. (2017). "Gobionellinae Bleeker, 1874". FishBase. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  5. Bailly N, ed. (2017). "Oxudercinae Günther, 1861". FishBase. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  6. Bailly N, ed. (2017). "Sicydiinae Gill, 1860". FishBase. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 29 July 2018.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.