柴帕钝牙虾虎鱼, 柴帕鈍牙鰕虎魚 (chai pa dun ya xia hu yu - Chaipa’s blunt-teethed goby)
Italy
Italian
saltafango di Zappa*
United Kingdom
English
New Guinea slender mudskipper
* proposed name
Zappa confluentus. Fly river, Papua New Guinea;
lateral view (above); dorsal view (centre); ventral view (below);
the bar is 10 mm long - freshly dead specimen (photo: G. Polgar, 2007)
Live colouration (pers. obs.: Fly river, Papua New Guinea):
ground colour dark grey to greenish dorsally, pale grey laterally and ventrally; pigmentation absent around the anal fin; irregular dark blotches and oblique dark bars on sides, with a chevron-like dark pattern which delineates the lateral myotomes; dorsal fins, anal and caudal fins hyaline; pectoral and pelvic fins with reddish rays
Colouration on preservation (Murdy, 1989):
ground colour dark grey, whitish ventrally; fins hyaline
Diagnosis (Murdy, 1989):
total D2 elements 27-30. dorsal fins connected by membrane; D2 connected by membrane to the caudal fin; posterior interorbital pore present.
The genus is characterised by the first spinous dorsal fin pterygiophore which is bent posteriorly at a point three quarters along its length to
extend horizontally over tip of fourth neural spine (see drawing)
Diet:
no published study is available; the feeding behaviour though is very similar to that one of phytoplanktivorous species, such as Boleophthalmus spp.
(pers. obs.)
Reproduction:
no published study is available
Ecological notes (pers. obs.: Fly river, Papua New Guinea):
found only in freshwater, in big numbers on mud river banks and open mudflats at low tide; it digs shallow burrows in the mud, actively feeding and interacting on the exposed substrate.
left: mud creek banks in front of Sturt Is.; fish are feeding at the water edge; lower Fly river, Papua New Guinea.
right:
open mudflat: here huge numbers of this species feed nearby tide pools; Tapila, lower Fly river, Papua New Guinea.
(Photos by G. Polgar, Papua New Guinea, 2007)
Distribution:
known only from Papua New Guinea, from the lower tracts of the Fly, Ramu and Bintuni rivers (Allen, 1991; Murdy, 1989; Roberts, 1978); type locality: Maidiri, Fly River, Papua New Guinea (Murdy, 1989)
Photographs of Zappa confluentus:
A: old photo of Z. confluentus, from its original description (Fly River, Papua New Guinea: Roberts, 1978, reproduced also in Murdy, 1989)*; B: an individual hidding inside a burrow (Sturt Is., Fly River, Papua New Guinea: photo G. Polgar, 2007); C: an exposed burrow reveals its superficial structure (Sturt Is., Fly River, Papua New Guinea: photo G. Polgar, 2007); D-F: close-ups (Sturt Is., Fly River, Papua New Guinea: photo G. Polgar, 2007); G-H: the main openings of their burrows: note the sub-horizontal inclination of tunnels (Sturt Is., lower Fly River, Papua New Guinea: photo G. Polgar, 2007); I: another close-up (Tapila, lower Fly River, Papua New Guinea: photo G. Polgar, 2007); J: a specimen inside a plastic bag (Fly River, Papua New Guinea: photo G. Polgar, 2007); K: an individual half-buried into mud in aquarium: note how pectoral fins let water pass from the gill slits to the outside (Fly River, Papua New Guinea: photo G. Polgar, 2007); L: a specimen in aquarium while it digs its burrow (Fly River, Papua New Guinea: photo G. Polgar, 2007).
Drawings of Zappa confluentus:
left: lateral view of the interdigitation between the first spinous dorsal fin pterygiophore and the fourth neural spine
(modified from Murdy, 1989)*; right: cephalic
sensory and nasal pores of Z. confluentus: an= anterior nostril; ao= anterior oculoscapular canal pore;
pio= posterior interorbital pore; pn= posterior nostril (modified from
Murdy, 1989)* - * with permission
Unless otherwise attributed, text and images on this page may be used under the terms of a
Creative Commons License.