gel khorok, gel-cheragh (= mud-eater, mud-grazer), mahi-sag (= dog-fish)
Iraq
Arabic
shelambo, abou-shlembo, abu-shelamboo
Italy
Italian
perioftalmo di Walton*
Pakistan
Urdu
gullo
United Kingdom
English
Walton's mudskipper, dark-blotched mudskipper
* proposed name
Periophthalmus waltoni. Bandar Abbas, Hormozgan, Iran;
lateral view (above); dorsal view (centre); ventral view (below);
the bar is 10 mm long;
freshly dead male specimen
(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
the species is named after H.J. Walton, who collected the material for the original
description (Murdy, 1989)
Live colouration (Murdy, 1989;
pers. obs.: Iran):
ground colour grey to slate; sometimes remnants of white spots on head; large dark blotches and vertical silvery bars on flanks of some specimens;
dorsal dark blotches in some specimens; D1 grey with a black margin anteriorly; four stripes on D2 from margin to base: grey, black, white, grey;
caudal and anal fins grey; pelvic fins dark; pectoral fins grey: in some specimens, the curved brown stripe is visible
Colouration on preservation (Murdy, 1989;
pers. obs.):
ground colour grey to slate; sometimes remnants of white spots on head; large dark blotches and vertical silvery bars on flanks of some specimens;
dorsal dark blotches in some specimens; D1 grey with a black margin anteriorly; four stripes on D2 from margin to base: grey, black, white, grey;
caudal and anal fins grey; pelvic fins dark; pectoral fins grey: in some specimens, the curved brown stripe is visible
Diagnosis (Murdy, 1989):
D1 X-XIII; longitudinal scale count 91-121; total D2 elements 13-14; total anal fin elements 11-12; TRDB 21-28; head width 13.7-21.9%SL; pelvic fin length
11.8-13.9%SL; length of anal fin
base 16.2-21.0%SL; length of D2 base 23.2-27.2%SL; moderate to strong pelvic frenum, with pelvic inner rays fused by a basal membrane for about one half of
their length; no stripe or spot on fin, with the
exception of few spots on its proximal and posterior portion in some specimens; no elongated spines; D2 with a single inframarginal dark stripe; dorsal
fins not connected by membrane.
The genus is yet undefined by synapomorphies
Ecological notes (pers. obs.: Iran):
locally very abundant on open mudflats and nearby stunted mangroves in the Persian Gulf
left: typical habitat of Periophthalmus waltoni
(photo: G. Polgar, Qeshm Island, Iran, 2007)
Distribution:
Persian Gulf to Pakistan; type locality: Iraq and Pakistan (Murdy, 1989)
Remarks:
this species is consumed by local fishermen, who easily catch them by hand-nets or even with bare hands
(pers obs.). Nonetheless, Islamic rules would usually prohibit to eat amphibious animals. Some cultures
believe that eating mudskippers could heal malaria fever
Photographs of Periophthalmus waltoni:
A: a preserved specimen of P. waltoni (5% formalin) from Khor Subiyah, Kuwait; B: an
adult nearby its burrow; C:
close-up; D: another close-up: feeding; E: close-up of the head of a preserved specimen (37% formalin) from Bandar Abbas, Iran;
F, G: specimens from Bandar Abbas, Iran, into a tank (photos A-G: G. Polgar, 2007);
H: another close up (photo: J. Bishop, Kuwait, 2006)* - * with permission
Drawings of Periophthalmus waltoni:
left: cephalic sensory and nasal pores of Periophthalmus spp.: an= anterior nostril; pn= posterior nostril (modified from
Murdy, 1989)*; right: drawing by Susan Laurie-Bourque, from Coad, 2007* - * with permission
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