identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03B14F40FFFCBD6FFFC418DE63C47EC3.text	03B14F40FFFCBD6FFFC418DE63C47EC3.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Aulopareia cyanomos (Bleeker 1849)	<div><p>Aulopareia cyanomos (Bleeker, 1849)</p><p>1849.  Gobius cyanomos Bleeker, Verhandelingen van het Bataviaasch Genootschap van Kunstenen Wetenschappen, 22:6</p><p>1989.  Acentrogobius cyanomos (Bleeker, 1849) . Ataur Rahman, A. K. Freshwater fishes of Bangladesh. The Zoological Society of Bangladesh. ii-xvii + 1-364</p><p>2022.  Aulopareia cyanomos (Bleeker, 1849) . Larson, H. K. and Z. Jaafar, A review of the gobiid fish genus  Aulopareia ( Gobiidae: Gobiinae) with description of a new species from Kuwait and discussion of the status of  Gobius cyanomos Bleeker. Zootaxa 5155 (no. 4): 493-516.</p><p>Common Name</p><p>Threadfin blue goby</p><p>Conservation Status</p><p>Least Concern (IUCN 3.1) (IUCN Red List)</p><p>Material examined</p><p>ZSI/SbRC/KN 2852, 1 ex., TL 11.6cm, SL 9.2cm, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=88.457115&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=21.70966" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 88.457115/lat 21.70966)">Dhanchi Island</a>, Sunderban Biosphere Reserve (21°42'34.77"N; 88°27'25.63"E), 1.3.2020, Coll: Arya Sen  .</p><p>Diagnostic Characters</p><p>1 st Dorsal spines 6; 2 nd Dorsal spine 1; 2 nd Dorsal soft rays 11; Anal spine 1; Anal soft rays 9; Ventral spine 1; Ventral soft rays 5; Pectoral soft rays 20; Caudal soft rays 12. Body rounded in lateral profile anteriorly but laterally compressed posteriorly, snout is flattened. Head moderately cylindrical; jaws equal; gill opening not extended anteriorly. Some spines of first dorsal in the middle elongate. Pelvic fins united medially; presence of frenum. Most scales ctenoid; scales on pectoral base, breast, nape cycloid; naked operculum. Pores, sensory canals present on head; longitudinal sensory papillae rows on cheek. Caudal fin is diamond shaped with pointed end. Dorsal profile of head slanted downward anteriorly, Caudal peduncle without groove. Interorbital space little convex. Body-color of the dorsal profile is light brown to yellow and little silvery ventrally. Black triangular spot present just above dorsal of gill opening. 5 mid-lateral dusky spots on body. Numerous pale blue-green spots on body, dorsal and caudal fin.2 nd dorsal and anal dark bearing reddish outer edge. Ventral and most of the caudal fins grey. Caudal fin having a dark Red to Orange coloration on the dorsal margin (Figure 2a, b). Detailed measurement of the specimen is given (Table 1).</p><p>Habitat</p><p>River Channel, Brackish Water (Salinity: 3-5 ppt).</p><p>Distribution</p><p>India: Mangroves of Tamilnadu, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh (Chakraborty et al., 2017). Elsewhere: Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Bangladesh, China, Philippines and Fiji Islands (Vasileva and Bogorodskii, 2004; AqGRISI, 2019).</p><p>Remarks</p><p>Type specimen was collected from Madura Straits near Surabaya and Kammal, Java, Indonesia (AqGRISI, 2019). This species was first described as  Gobius cyanomos by Bleeker in 1849. Later Ataur Rahman 1989 placed this species under  Acentrogobius 7. Larson and Zafar, 2022 placed the species under the genus  Aulopareia Smith, 1945 . Presence of elongated infraorbital pore and absence of postorbital pore and presence of a single inter-orbital pore are the characters, which distinguishes  Aulopareia from  Acentrogobius .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B14F40FFFCBD6FFFC418DE63C47EC3	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Sen, Arya;Sreeraj, Chemmencheri Ramakrishnan;Raghunathan, Chelladurai	Sen, Arya, Sreeraj, Chemmencheri Ramakrishnan, Raghunathan, Chelladurai (2023): First report of two euryhaline gobiid fishes (Gobiidae Cuvier, 1816) from West Bengal, India. Species (e 29 s 1512) 24 (73): 1-8, DOI: 10.54905/disssi/v24i73/e29s1512, URL: https://doi.org/10.54905/disssi/v24i73/e29s1512
03B14F40FFFDBD68FFC41BF667CA7907.text	03B14F40FFFDBD68FFC41BF667CA7907.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Stigmatogobius yanamensis Visweswara Rao 1971	<div><p>Stigmatogobius yanamensis Rao, 1971</p><p>1971.  Stigmatogobius yanamensis Visweswara Rao, Journal of the Zoological Society of India, 23:1</p><p>2005.  Pseudogobius yanamensis Rao, 1971 . Larson, H. K., A revision of the gobiidae genus  Stigmatogobius (Teleostei:  Gobiidae), with descriptions of two new species. Ichthyological Exploration of Freshwaters 16:4</p><p>Common Name</p><p>Barfin fatnose goby</p><p>Conservation Status</p><p>Not Enlisted (IUCN 3.1) (IUCN Red List)</p><p>Material examined</p><p>ZSI/SbRC/KN 3353, 1 ex., TL 25mm, SL 20.3mm, <a href="https://tb.plazi.org/GgServer/search?materialsCitation.longitude=82.33667&amp;materialsCitation.latitude=16.83139" title="Search Plazi for locations around (long 82.33667/lat 16.83139)">Pakhir Dweep</a> near Pakhiralaya, Sunderban Biosphere Reserve (22° 8'49.55"N; 88°51'11.47"E), 25.12.2019, Coll: Arya Sen. (Figure 2c, d). ZSI/SbRC/KN 3133, 1 ex., TL 28mm, SL 23.2mm, Coringa Wild Life Sanctuary (16°49′53″N; 82°20′12″E), 11.12.2020, Coll: Dr. Sreeraj, C.R  .</p><p>Diagnostic Characters</p><p>1st Dorsal spines 6; 2nd Dorsal spine 1; 2nd Dorsal soft rays 7; Anal spine 1; Anal soft rays 7; Ventral spine 1; Ventral soft rays 5; Pectoral soft rays 15; Caudal soft rays 14. Elongate body. Body rounded in lateral profile anteriorly but laterally compressed posteriorly, snout is rounded at tip. Small teeth in several rows on both jaws. Caudal oblong as head. Opercle scaled. Dorsal profile straight and ventral profile bulges at near pelvic base. Eyes placed dorso-laterally. Small mouth with oblique opening and shorter lower jaw. Tongue anteriorly grooved and pointed at middle. Gill opening restricted before base of pectoral. Pectoral and caudal fin rounded. Pelvic slightly longer than pectoral. Body covered with ctenoid scales, six series of longitudinal rows between base of 2nd dorsal and anal origin.</p><p>Body-color of the dorsal and lateral profile is very light green to olivaceous and little silvery ventrally. Scale edges are darker in head region; presence of numerous black dots; presence of distinct 5-7 black bands. Dusky caudal fin.5 dark blotches in a line on the lateral profile. 3 dark blotches in shape of a triangle on the caudal peduncle region (Figure 2c, d). Black stripe on the first dorsal after middle portion. Detailed measurement of the specimen is given (Table 1).</p><p>Habitat</p><p>Temporary mangrove mud pools, created inland at the time of low tide having interconnected channels underground. Brackish Water (Salinity: 0-3 ppt)</p><p>Distribution</p><p>India: Godavari estuary in Andhra Pradesh (Rao, 1971). Elsewhere: Vietnam, Singapore (Venkateswarlu and Ramarao, 1986; Tan and Lim, 2019).</p><p>Remarks</p><p>This species can be differentiated from its commonly related species by its distinctive vertical sub-marginal bluish-black bar on the first dorsal fin and four dusky blotches on the side behind the anus, the rearmost blotch is almost joined to two similar blotches at the base of the caudal fin (Tran et al., 2013). Also, the transparent anal fin, truncated caudal fin and a smaller number of lateral line scales helps in the identification. Study of the specimens Collected from the type locality, i.e., from Coringa Wildlife Sanctuary of Godavary estuary, by the authors also supports the original description of the species and provides the fact of  S. yanamensis being a valid species.</p><p>The species was described as  S. yanamensis by Visweswara Rao from the Godavari estuary in India (Rao, 1971). Talwar and Jhingran, (1991) discussed this species as a questionable synonym of  S. minima Hora, 1923 without any suitable justification. Although the present study as well as the study by Larson and Hammer, (2021), gives justification of  S. yanamensis to be a separate valid species. The holotype and six paratypes are held at the Zoology Museum, Andhra University, Waltair (Fricke et al., 2021). Larson H.K. on the revision of Stigamtogobius placed this species under  Pseudogobius Popta, 1922; without much justification (Larson, 2005). Although it seems to be poorly known, the species was again recorded from the Mekong delta in Vietnam (Tran et al., 2013). From 17 years old survey of mangroves of Singapore, this species has been identified in 2019 (Tan and Lim, 2019). Recently in 2021, Larson &amp; Hammer in the revision of  Pseudogobius, again removed the species from this genus because it has a different setup of sensory canals and pores on its head and does not have the same characteristic corkscrew-shaped intestinal arrangement that is found in  Pseudogobius (Larson et al., 2016) . As well as the  S. minima which was previously been confused with  S. yanamensis is now placed under the genus  Pseudogobius (Larson and Hammer, 2021) . Still  S. yanamensis has been recorded as a synonym of  S. minima in World Register of Marine Species, accepted as a Nomen Dubium in Catalogue of Fishes and as a doubtful species from India by Parenti, (2021). Authors suggest that  S. yanamensis should be accepted as a valid species following the current study (Rao, 1971; Larson and Hammer, 2021).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B14F40FFFDBD68FFC41BF667CA7907	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Sen, Arya;Sreeraj, Chemmencheri Ramakrishnan;Raghunathan, Chelladurai	Sen, Arya, Sreeraj, Chemmencheri Ramakrishnan, Raghunathan, Chelladurai (2023): First report of two euryhaline gobiid fishes (Gobiidae Cuvier, 1816) from West Bengal, India. Species (e 29 s 1512) 24 (73): 1-8, DOI: 10.54905/disssi/v24i73/e29s1512, URL: https://doi.org/10.54905/disssi/v24i73/e29s1512
