Deltentosteus quadrimaculatus (Valenciennes, 1837)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5144.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3D15F4CB-1839-41FC-BECE-BAE2D8F87CB5 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6601516 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/616687CB-3F04-FF93-FF76-FC98FB6FF98A |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Deltentosteus quadrimaculatus (Valenciennes, 1837) |
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Deltentosteus quadrimaculatus (Valenciennes, 1837) View in CoL ( Fig. 52 View FIGURE 52 )—Four-spotted Goby
Gobius quadrimaculatus Valenciennes View in CoL in Cuvier & Valenciennes, 1837: 44; type locality: northwestern Mediterranean Sea , France, Nice .
Size. Maximum size 8 cm total length (Miller 1986).
Morphology. D VI + I,8–9; A I,8–9; P 17–18 (Miller 1986). Moderately small goby with subcylindrical body, laterally compressed towards caudal fin, head slightly depressed and moderately large. Snout large, gently sloping. Eyes large. Mouth superior, oblique, tip of lower jaw at the horizontal level of eye. Angle of jaws below anterior half of orbit. Predorsal area and nape scaled. Caudal peduncle slender, lower than body depth. The first dorsal fin higher than the second, but with no elongated spines, except in adult males where the second spine is elongated and filamentous (Miller 1986). Caudal fin rounded to truncate.
Live coloration. Body mainly brown or beige dorsally with 5 pale dorsal saddles, faint with no black outlines, each terminating with a midlateral dark blotch. These midlateral dark blotches of irregular shape, less than 1/3 of body height ( Fig. 52 View FIGURE 52 ). Caudal-fin base mark T-shaped and higher than other midlateral marks, covering about entire caudal peduncle height ( Fig. 52 View FIGURE 52 ). Ventral half of body whitish. Females may display a pale blue dot on nape just behind eyes, partly circled in brown. The first dorsal fin with a black spot distally between fifth and sixth spines ( Fig. 52a View FIGURE 52 ), and with three pronounced dark streaks along first dorsal spine in males ( Fig. 52b View FIGURE 52 ) ( Miller & Loates 1997; Louisy 2015; Pillon et al. 2016a).
Similar species. Deltentosteus collonianus , Pomatoschistus adriaticus , P. marmoratus , P. minutus .
Habitat. Infralittoral to circalittoral species, known from 2–150 m on soft bottoms, mostly sand, also on mud ( Louisy 2015; Pillon et al. 2016a; Patzner 2021).
Geographic distribution. Mediterranean and adjacent Atlantic Ocean: in the Mediterranean, from Gibraltar along northern coast to the Levant; in the Atlantic, from Galicia to Morocco (Miller 1986).
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.
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Deltentosteus quadrimaculatus (Valenciennes, 1837)
Kovačić, Marcelo, Renoult, Julien P., Pillon, Roberto, Svensen, Rudolf, Bogorodsky, Sergey V., Engin, Semih & Louisy, Patrick 2022 |
Gobius quadrimaculatus
Cuvier, G. & Valenciennes, A. 1837: 44 |