银线弹涂鱼, 銀線彈塗魚 (yin xian tan tu yu - silver-lined mudskipper)
Denmark
Danish
båndet dyndspringer
Guam
English
barred mudskipper
Indonesia
Javanese
blodok
Italy
Italian
perioftalmo argentato*
Japan
Japanese
minami tobihaze
Micronesia
English
barred mudskipper
New Caledonia
Kumak
bwaxit
Papua New Guinea
English
barred mudskipper
Philippines
Tagalog
bia
Solomon Islands
Gela
iga kukulu mana
Solomon Islands
English
silver-lined mudskipper
South Africa
English
bigfin mudhopper
South Africa
Afrikaans
Grootvin-modderspringer
United Kingdom
English
barred mudskipper, silver-lined mudskipper
* proposed name
Periophthalmus argentilineatus. Morib, peninsular Malaysia;
lateral view (above); dorsal view (centre); ventral view (below);
the bar is 10 mm long - freshly dead specimen, male (photo: G. Polgar, 2006)
Periophthalmus argentilineatus. RMNH 4593, coll. Bleeker 1879
possible syntype of Periophthalmus dipusBleeker, 1854
Sumatra, Java, Flores (Eggert, 1935);
lateral view (above); dorsal view (centre); ventral view (below);
the bar is 10 mm long - specimen fixed and preserved in ethanol, male
(photo: G. Polgar, 2007)
Etymology:
'Periophthalmus' is a compound name from the Greek 'peri' (around), and 'ophthalmôn' (eye), which refers to the wide visual field of these species
'argentilineatus' means 'silvery-lined' in Latin, which refers to the vertical silvery stripes on flanks
(Murdy, 1989)
Live colouration
(Murdy, 1989, pers. obs.: Peninsular Malaysia, North Sulawesi, Australia NT):
background colour brownish to dark grey on dorsum and sides, ventrally whitish; head
ventrally white; many small white speckles on cheeks and opercula; silvery
vertical stripes on flanks, ventrally more evident; 3-8 dorsal dark brown saddle-like irregular bars may be visible; D1 with a reddish to brownish background, a wide black to dark brown inframarginal stripe, which can be darker in the anterior portion
(e.g. photosH, L), and many small white spots below it; margin white to transparent. D2 with a black medial stripe; with irregular brownish speckles proximally on rays and membrane (which can coalesce to form a brownish
background with a few or no white spots); and with a yellow to red margin; caudal fin dusky, with series of dusky to brownish speckles along rays; anal fin background
hyaline, in some specimens distally dusky to orange; pectoral fins dusky; pelvic fins proximally darker, ventrally whitish, and dorsally whitish to yellowish
Colouration on preservation
(Murdy, 1989; pers. obs.):
ground colour dorsally and laterally grey to dark brown, ventrally whitish to dusky; some few whitish speckles may be preserved in some specimens; vertical
silvery stripes are more visible in the ventral portion of sides; dark and irregular dorsal banded pattern frequently visible; D1 background brownish
to slate, many scattered white spots proximally and a conspicuous blackish inframarginal stripe; margin pale to transparent;
D2 brownish with a dark brown to black medial stripe and scattered whitish spots on proximal membrane in some specimens; caudal fin dusky with series of
dark speckles on rays; pectoral fins dusky; pelvic
fins white ventrally, dorsally dusky; anal fin white
Diagnosis (Murdy,
1989):
D1 XI-XVI; total D2 elements 10-13; total anal fin elements 9-12; TRDB 18-26; longitudinal scale count 64-100; head width 14.3-22.6%SL; pelvic fin
length 11.3-15.2%SL; length of anal fin base 14.0-19.4%SL; length of D2 base 17.6-23.7%SL; pelvic fins almost completely to totally separated, pelvic frenum
absent; D1 margin concave or straight; dorsal fins not connected by membrane; D1 with a dark inframarginal stripe and numerous white spots at least in the proximal portion; no elongated spines.
At least in some East African populations, the reddish D2 margin is absent in adult reproductive females (Magnus, 1981).
See the remarks on P. kalolo about the discrimination between these two species.
The genus is yet undefined by synapomorphies
Diet:
carnivorous, opportunistic, apparently only gape-limited (insects, crustaceans, fish eggs, polychaetes, etc.: Milward, 1974); nonetheless, different selectivity and feeding regimes had been observed in the two sexes, suggesting different reproductive strategies through the tidal synodic cycle; these studies also put in evidence that at least in East African populations, this species is both a diurnal and a nocturnal feeder (Colombini et al., 1996)
Reproduction:
males dig reproductive burrows below the MHWN datum (Mean High Water Neap, in front of the first trees of the mangrove forest) in areas not covered by the vegetation, and jump with the spread fins to attract females from the distance, then inducing them to spawn inside their
burrows; during the period of cohabitation consecutive spawning events take part; then only the male guards the eggs,
always remaining nearby the nest and maintaining an air phase
in the egg chamber at low tide; at high tide, when the nest is submerged, the male enters the burrow (Brillet, 1969a; 1970; 1975; 1976; 1980;
Magnus, 1981)
left: a male of Periophthalmus argentilineatus poking out of its reproductive burrow
right: a male gulps air to transport it inside the burrow
Ecological notes (pers. obs.: Peninsular Malaysia, North Sulawesi, Australia NT):
locally common on higher mudflats at low tide, usually at a distance of less than 2 m from the water, not far from the vegetation, typically along creek banks (tide pools, creeks, inlets, etc.: pers. obs.).
At ebb tide P. argentilineatus follows the water edge to feed on the higher mudflat or on the mud banks of tidal waterways (Brillet, 1970; Magnus, 1981; pers. obs); at flood
tide the fishes follow the tide again keeping out of water: they can both perch on roots and trunks, not unlike P. chrysospilos, or can simply wait at the water edge, their heads directed toward the water (Magnus, 1981). The details however may be more complex, being also related both with tidal synodic and diel light cycles (Colombini et al., 1995)
left: bank of a tidal point bar of a creek fringed by Avicennia sp. mangroves, a typical habitat where P. argentilineatuscan be found at low tide
(Likupang, North Sulawesi, Indonesia)
right: a P. argentilineatus perching on a trunk of Avicennia alba, waiting for the low tide (Tg. Piai, peninsular Malaysia)
(Photos by G. Polgar, 2005, left; 2006, right)
Distribution (Murdy, 1989):
from the Red Sea and the east coast of Africa, eastward to Southern Japan, Australasia and Oceania, up to Samoa Islands;
type localities: Irian Jaya and Moluccas, Indonesia. This distribution is the widest of all other oxudercine gobies