Varicus
Robins & Böhlke, 1961
Familie: Gobiidae TypusartVaricus bucca Robins & Böhlke, 1961 |
Arten
V. adamsi Gilmore et al., 2016
V. benthonis (Ginsburg, 1953)
V. bucca Robins & Böhlke, 1961
V. cephalocellatus Gilmore et al., 2016
V. decorum Van Tassell et al., 2016
V. fisheri (Herre, 1942)
V. imswe Greenfield, 1981
V. lacerta Tornabene et al., 2016
V. marilynae Gilmore, 1979
V. nigritus Gilmore et al., 2016
V. prometheus Fuentes et al., 2023
V. roatanensis Fuentes et al., 2023
V. veliguttatus Van Tassell et al., 2016
V. vespa (Hastings & Bortone, 1981)
Etymologie
Varicus (= mit abgespreizten Füßen), bezieht sich auf die fast getrennten (im Vergleich zu verschmolzenen) Bauchflossen. (Übersetzt aus: The ETYFish Project)
Literatur
- Robins, C.R. & Böhlke, J.E. 1961. A new gobioid fish from the Antilles and comments on Ctenogobius fasciatus and C. curtisi. Copeia, 1961 (1): 46-50. (doi) Zitatseite [:46, !!]
- Hastings, P.A. & Bortone, S.A. 1981. Chriolepis vespa, a new species of gobiid fish from the northeastern Gulf of Mexico. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 94 (2): 427-436. (BHL) Zitatseite [:435, als mögliches Synonym von Chriolepis]
- Williams, J.T. & Gilbert, C.R. 1983. Additional information on the gobiid fish Varicus imswe, with comments on the nominal species of Varicus. Northeast Gulf Science, 6 (2): 185-189. (PDF) Zitatseite [:, Varicus als gültige Gattung]
- Birdsong, R.S., Murdy, E.O. & Pezold, F.L. 1988. A study of the vertebral column and median fisn osteology in gobioid fishes with comments on gobioid relationships. Bulletin of Marine Science, 42: 174–214. Zitatseite [:189]
- Thacker, C.E. 2011. Systematics of Gobiidae. Chapter 1.10 pp. 129-136. In:
- Patzner, R.A., van Tassell, J.L., Kovacic, M. & Kapoor, B.G. (eds.) 2011. The biology of gobies. CRC Press, Science Publishers, Enfield, N. H. Zitatseite Zitatseite [:131]
- Tornabene, L., Van Tassell, J.L., Gilmore, R.G., Robertson, D.R., Young, F. & Baldwin, C.C. 2016. Molecular phylogeny, analysis of character evolution, and submersible collections enable a new classification of a diverse group of gobies (Teleostei: Gobiidae: Nes subgroup), including nine new species and four new genera. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 177 (4): 764–812. (doi) Zitatseite [:29]