Sicyopterus stimpsoni

Sicyopterus stimpsoni
Nopoli rockclimbing goby
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Gobiidae
Genus: Sicyopterus
Species: S. stimpsoni
Binomial name
Sicyopterus stimpsoni
(Gill, 1860)
Synonyms

Sicydium stimpsoni Gill, 1860

Sicyopterus stimpsoni ('cucumber-wing') aka the Nopoli rockclimbing goby, Oopu nopili, or Stimpson's goby, is a species of amphidromous fish in the Gobiidae family and is endemic to Hawaii.

Juveniles move from saltwater to freshwater streams shortly before changes in the anatomy of their mouths make eating plankton impossible. Their dietary behaviour depends critically on the benthic algal cycle, which is locked into the hydrological cycles of the island streams. [1]

The species in its adult form is found in the upper parts of clear, fast-running mountain streams, where there is clean gravel and rocks with no sedimentation, allowing the growth of algae on rock surfaces. It is found on all the Hawaiian islands, although it has become rare on O‘ahu. The species is herbivorous, feeding only on diatoms and filamentous algae, and vigorously defending its feeding patch. The males display brilliant blue and red colours during the breeding season, colours which change with the mood of the fish. The females attach their eggs to rocks where they are fertilised by the males, and the hatchlings are immediately washed downstream into the sea, where they develop, later to return to the freshwater pools upstream, where they live for several years. To arrive at these pools the juveniles need to climb the vertical rock under and beside very high waterfalls. The climbing is postponed until their mouthparts have moved from a forward-facing position to under the body. This change is effected in two days, altering their diet from that of an omnivore to feeding almost exclusively on algae growing on the rock surfaces, and not coincidentally enabling them to ascend slippery waterfall rocks by using mouth and pelvic suckers.

It is preyed upon by Black-crowned Night Herons and during its upstream migration through the estuary by Caranx spp., Polydactylus sexfilis and Sphyraena barracuda. [2]

Five of the seven endemic fish species on Hawaii are gobioid, and all of these gobioids are amphidromous stream dwellers, adapted to the steep torrents of Hawaiian mountains, and extremely sensitive to habitat disturbance.[3]

External links

References


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Sicyopterus stimpsoni —   Sicyopterus stimpsoni Clasificación científica Reino …   Wikipedia Español

  • Sicyopterus — Sicyopterus …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Sicyopterus — Sicyopterus …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Sicyopterus — Taxobox name = Sicyopterus regnum = Animalia phylum = Chordata classis = Actinopterygii ordo = Perciformes familia = Gobiidae genus = Sicyopterus Sicyopterus is a genus of fish in the Gobiidae family. It contains the following species: *… …   Wikipedia

  • Nopoli rockclimbing goby — Taxobox name = Nopoli rockclimbing goby status = LR/nt | status system = IUCN2.3 regnum = Animalia phylum = Chordata classis = Actinopterygii ordo = Perciformes familia = Gobiidae genus = Sicyopterus species = S. stimpsoni binomial = Sicyopterus… …   Wikipedia

  • William Stimpson — (* 14. Februar 1832 in Roxbury, Boston; † 26. Mai 1872 in Ilchester, Maryland) war ein US amerikanischer Naturforscher und Zoologe, der sich auf marine Wirbellose spezialisierte …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Стимпсон, Уильям — Уильям Стимпсон англ. William Stimpson …   Википедия

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