Parequula melbournensis

Parequula melbournensis, the silverbelly, Melbourne silver biddy or silver biddy, is a species of fish in the family Garreidae, the mojarras. The species was first described by Francis de Laporte de Castelnau in 1872. It is the only member of the monotypic genus Parequula erected by Franz Steindachner in 1879. It is native to the coastal waters of southern Australia at depths from 3 to 100 m (9.8 to 328.1 ft). This species can reach 22 cm (8.7 in) in total length.[1]

Parequula melbournensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Gerreidae
Genus: Parequula
Steindachner, 1879
Species:
P. melbournensis
Binomial name
Parequula melbournensis
(Castelnau, 1872)
Synonyms
  • Gerres melbournensis Castelnau, 1872
  • Chthamalopteryx melbournensis (Castelnau, 1872)

Description

P. melbournensis is similar to Gerres subfasciatus, but can be distinguished from G. subfasciatus by its long-based anal fin and dorsal fin that is not anteriorly elevated.[2]

gollark: I have one, but it ends up having to basically run the entire BIOS again to rebuild the environment, and is now quite tightly coupled to potatOS.
gollark: And I think <@111572502722920448> said something about making their own sandbox thingy. They definitely have an old and kind of bad but working one available.
gollark: You can look at the insanely complex partly self-modifying mess known as potatOS for inspiration.
gollark: What works better is just preventing access to directories or files via editing the `fs` API.
gollark: <@438023494953861142> Look, your thing is honestly not great at actually preventing access to anything, and is not a convincing copy of the shell. Also, you can open `lua` (probably) to just do `fs.delete` or whatever.

See also

References

  1. Froese, Rainer and Pauly, Daniel, eds. (2013). "Parequula melbournensis" in FishBase. April 2013 version.
  2. Melbourne Silver Biddy (Parequula melbournensis), distinguished from the Silver Biddy, Gerres subfasciatus (Cuvier, 1830)], australianmuseum.net.au
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