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Image of Great blue spotted mudskipper
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Great Blue Spotted Mudskipper

Boleophthalmus pectinirostris (Linnaeus 1758)

Diagnostic Description

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Total elements in second dorsal fin 23-26 (mean = 24.8); caudal-fin length/SL 18.3-22.2% (mean = 20.2%); head length/SL 24.3-28.0% (mean = 26.0%); length of second dorsal fin base/SL 41.5-46.1% (mean = 43.4%) longitudinal scale count 84-123 (mean = 104); predorsal scales 26-48 (mean = 33.9).
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Diagnostic Description

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Distinguished by the following characteristics: Total elements in D2 23-26; caudal fin length 18.3-22.2% SL; head length 24.3-28.0% SL; length of D2 base 41.5-46.1% SL; first D2 element usually segmented and branched; longitudinal scale count 84-123; predorsal scales 26-48; lower jaw teeth notched (Ref. 5218).
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Recorder
Rodolfo B. Reyes
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Morphology

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Dorsal soft rays (total): 24 - 31; Analsoft rays: 24 - 30
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Trophic Strategy

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An intertidal and amphibious air-breather that actively shuttles back and forth between tidepools and air (Ref. 31184). Creeps around and browses on mud flats at low tide; stays in a burrow in the mud at high tide.
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Grace Tolentino Pablico
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Biology

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An intertidal and amphibious air-breather that actively shuttles back and forth between tide pools and air (Ref. 31184). Creeps around and browses on mud flats at low tide; stays in a burrow in the mud at high tide. Herbivores that graze on diatoms on the mud surface during low tide (Ref. 92840). Caught for food. Used in Chinese medicine (Ref. 12166).
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Rainer Froese
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Importance

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fisheries: minor commercial; price category: very high; price reliability: very questionable: based on ex-vessel price for species in this family
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Rainer Froese
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分布

provided by The Fish Database of Taiwan
分布於西北太平洋,包括台灣、中國、日本、韓國等沿海。台灣產於北部及西部沙地沿岸。
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臺灣魚類資料庫
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利用

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重要之經濟性食用魚類,常與中藥一起燉煮,肉味極鮮美,是上品佳餚,有明目補身之效。唯不易捕捉,主要漁法是陷阱與手釣,近年西南部有人工養殖,尤以北門鄉為甚。全年皆產。
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描述

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背鰭V-I , 23~25;臀鰭I , 23~25;胸鰭18~19;縱列鱗90~105;橫列鱗20~22。體延長而側扁,背、腹緣平直,尾柄高而平直。眼小位高,背側位,互相靠近。吻圓鈍,大於眼徑。口大,近平直,上下頜牙各一行。體及頭部被圓鱗;前部鱗小,後部鱗稍大,無側線。背鰭兩枚,分離,第一背鰭較高,基底較短,硬棘皆呈絲狀延長,以第III棘為最長;第二背鰭基底長,最後面的軟條平放時可達尾鰭基底;臀鰭與第二背鰭同型;胸鰭短而尖圓,基部具臂狀肌柄;左右腹鰭癒合成一吸盤;尾鰭長而尖圓。體背側青褐色,腹側淺色。第一背鰭深藍色,具許多不規則白色小點;第二背鰭藍色,具4列縱行小白斑;臀、胸及腹鰭皆為淡灰色;尾鰭灰青色,有時具白色小斑。(林沛立編寫 2012/10)
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棲地

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主要棲息於河口區及紅樹林的半淡鹹水域,以及沿岸海域的泥灘水域。多活動於潮間帶,退潮時借胸鰭肌柄於泥灘爬行或跳動覓食;漲潮時則躲於洞穴中。皮膚可做為呼吸的輔助器官,所以只要保持身體的濕潤即可長期離開水面。其活動速度快,但易受驚嚇,會很快跳離,甚至躲入水中或洞穴裡 。領域性強,對於同類物種或其他物種(如招潮蟹)入侵其領域範圍時,牠便張大口並開展背鰭及尾鰭,以便威嚇及驅趕入侵者。雄魚於求偶期間亦會開展背鰭及尾鰭,併會跳動於泥灘中,展開一場華麗的求偶舞。雜食性,以有機質、底藻、浮游動物及其它無脊椎動物等為食。
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Boleophthalmus pectinirostris

provided by wikipedia EN

Boleophthalmus pectinirostris, commonly known as the great blue spotted mudskipper and mutsugoro (むつごろう, mutsugoro), is a species of mudskipper native to the Northwest Pacific. It can be found on the coastlines of Japan, eastern China, Sumatra, Malaysia, Taiwan and the Korean Peninsula.[1]

Description

Individuals of B. pectinirostris are predominantly greenish-grey in colour, with prominent sky blue speckles across their body, including their fins and on the skin below their eyes.[2]

Anatomy

Epidermis

B. pectinirostis is amphibious, and breathes through its epidermis, a process known as cutaneous respiration. A study examining specimens from Jeollanam-do, South Korea, found that the epidermis of B. pectinirostis has three layers. The outermost layer consists of flattened, polygonal cells in one to eight layers of cells. The small cells are 5–7 µm by 5–8 µm, arranged in regular, compact rows on the outermost region of the layer, mostly in the jaw and fin epidermis. Larger mucuous cells are distributed throughout all regions of the epidermis except the fins and the sucking disc, located in between dermal bulges.[3]

The middle layer consists of layers of small cells and larger cells known as swollen cells that have a large vacuole. Whereas other air-breathing fishes have thicker middle layers with cells that uptake oxygen, members of the Boleophthalamus genus have the simple swollen cell structure that prevents dehydration while walking on land.[4] The number of layers ranged from 1 to 15. The innermost layer is the stratus germinativum, and consists of one layer of cuboidal and roughly columnar basal cells. The thickness of the epidermis largely depends on the middle layer thickness, and is generally thick in the body and thin in the fins.[3]

Dermal bulges

B. pectinirostis also has dermal bulges at the highest point of its scales on its body, except for where the fins and sucking disc are. The bulges' mean height ranges from 82–391 µm and their mean weight ranges from 172–485 µm. The distribution of bulges ranges from 0 to 6 per millimetre. The epidermis is very thin at these bulges, such that the stratus germinativum is very close to the outside.[3]

Blood vessels

B. pectinirostis has blood vessels and dermal capillaries in its dermis bulges just below the inner stratus germinativum layer.[3]

Taxonomy

Etymology

B. pectinirostris's generic name, Boleophthalmus, is derived from the placement of the fish's eyes, which can be raised above the level of their orbits. It is taken from the Greek bole ('ejected') and ophthalmon ('eye'). The specific epithet is a compound Latin form, taken from pecten ('comb, rake') and rostrum ('beak'), and likely refers to the incised teeth of the fish's mandible, which it uses to scrape its food off the surface of the ground when on land.[2]

Phylogeny

Phylogenetic analysis of B. pectinirostris conducted in 2014 found that the species may in fact include at least two cryptic species as part of a species complex; one being native to the South and East China Sea, and another being found in the Strait of Malacca northward towards Taiwan.[5]

Habitat and distribution

Boleophthalmus pectinirostris can be found in Peninsular and eastern Malaysia, Sumatra (Indonesia), China, Taiwan, Korea, and Japan, living in warm tropical and sub-tropical estuaries. As a euryhaline species, it can also survive in a wide range of salinities. It prefers muddy areas near river mouths and mangroves, where it is easier to burrow in.[6] Its presence in Malaysia and Sumatra was confirmed in 2009, where it is sympatric with Boleophthalmus boddarti. Prior to 2009, the populations in this region were misidentified as the species Boleophthalmus dussumieri, another species in the same genus which is related to both B. boddarti and B. pectiniriostris.[2]

Behaviour

Burrowing

Like other mudskippers, B. pectinirostris is able to move on land, using its pectoral and pelvic fins to clamber over the surface of tidal flats in its habitat at low tide. Using its tail, it can also hop across the ground to move faster.[1] During high tide, the night, or when its predators are present, the fish retreats into a burrow, dug to a depth of approximately 1 metre (3.3 ft) below the surface, becoming active again during the day or when the threat has passed.

Boleophthalmus pectinirostris use their mouths to move soil and maintain their burrows, in the process increasing sediment surface area and oxygenating deeper layers of sediment. Burrows of the B. pectinirostris examined in mangrove ecosystems in Pandansari Brebes, Central Java were observed to have diameters of 3–4 centimetres (1.2–1.6 in) in muddy beach areas and 2–9 centimetres (0.79–3.54 in) in mangrove areas, identified as belonging to members of the species by tracks left by their fins.[6]

Boleophthalmus pectinirostris in Funing Bay, Fujian, China also constructs mud walls around the entrance of their burrows in the winter, creating a shallow walled pool that maintains a relatively consistent temperature, maintains a microphytobenthos (e.g. diatoms) population for food, keeps other fish out, and prevents tides from moving the sediment around and in their burrows.[7]

Territorialism

Great blue mudskippers are territorial,[7] and males will fight with others of their species over access to burrows and during the breeding season, signalling their aggression by raising their large dorsal fins. The species is also known to compete with the Japanese mud crab (Macrophthalmus japonicus) over food in locations where both species occur.

Diet

Boleophthalmus pectinirostris are herbivores. During low tide, they leave their tunnels to graze on diatoms at the surface.[1][6]

Relationship with humans

Culinary use

Boleophthalmus pectinirostris is of culinary importance in Japan, and is fished in areas where the species is particularly abundant, such as the Ariake Sea and the Yatsushiro Sea in Saga Prefecture and Kumamoto Prefecture on the island of Kyushu. A style of cooking the fish local to this region involves grilling and basting it whole over charcoal.[8]

Fishing

Boleophthalmus pectinirostris is typically caught by line or by trapping. The line method, referred to as mutsukake, is an unusual method developed in Japan that bears a resemblance to fly fishing, and is carried out at low tide with the use of a long fishing rod, a harpoon-like hook that catches in the fish's skin, and a wooden sled called an oshiita, which is used to travel out onto the tidal flats and to support oneself, as the surface of the flats is too soft to stand on. An alternative means of catching great blue spotted mudskippers is by using long burrow traps made out of hollow bamboo, which are driven into the tidal flat and trap the fish after they enter.[2]

Status and conservation

As a shoreline species, B. pectinirostris is vulnerable to water pollution and overfishing, and had formerly been in decline from around 1970 due to these factors. However, surveys of the populations in the Ariake and Yatsushiro Sea conducted in 2013 found that the species' numbers had increased by over eight times since the previous survey, which was undertaken 16 years prior. B. pectinirostris's recovery is believed to be the result of improved water quality, reduced fishing of the species due to a lower demand, and implementation of conservation measures. A series of mild winters may have also factored into the population increase.[9]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Boleophthalmus pectinirostris summary page". FishBase. Retrieved 2023-02-15.
  2. ^ a b c d Polgar, Gianluca (2014-06-01). "The mudskipper - Boleophthalmus pectinirostris". www.mudskipper.it. Retrieved 2023-02-15.
  3. ^ a b c d Park, Jong-Young; Lee, Yong-Joo; Kim, Ik-Soo; Kim, So-Young (2003-04-15). "A comparative study of the regional epidermis of an amphibious mudskipper fish, Boleophthalmus pectinirostris (Gobiidae, Pisces)" (PDF). Folia Zoologica. 52 (4): 431–440. ISSN 0139-7893.
  4. ^ Hidayat, Saifullah; Wicaksono, Adhityo; Raharjeng, Anita; Jin, Desmond Soo Mun; Alam, Parvez; Retnoaji, Bambang (2021-11-29). "The Morphologies of Mudskipper Pelvic Fins in Relation to Terrestrial and Climbing Behaviour". Proceedings of the Zoological Society. 75 (1): 83–93. doi:10.1007/s12595-021-00422-1.
  5. ^ Hui, Chen; Polgar, Gianluca; Cui-Zhang, Fu (January 2014). "Cryptic species and evolutionary history of Boleophthalmus pectinirostris complex along the northwestern Pacific coast". Acta Hydrobiologica Sinica: 75–86 – via ResearchGate.
  6. ^ a b c Cintra, Allsay; Fitrian, Tyani; Oktaviyani, Selvia; Subandi, R; Pesilette, R N (April 2021). "Effect of burrows of Boleophthalmus pectinirostris (Linnaeus, 1758) (Class Actinopterygii Family Gobiidae) on total organic matter in the mangrove ecosystem of Pandansari Brebes, Central Java". IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science. 744 (012008). doi:10.1088/1755-1315/744/1/012008.
  7. ^ a b Chen, Shixi; Hong, Wanshu; Zhang, Qiyong; Su, Yongquan (April 2007). "Why does the mudskipper Boleophthalmus pectinirostris form territories in farming ponds?". Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK. 87 (2): 615–619. doi:10.1017/S0025315407054434.
  8. ^ "Grilled mudskipper - 【郷土料理ものがたり】". kyoudo-ryouri.com. kyodoryori-story, Ltd. Retrieved 2023-02-15.
  9. ^ "Mudskipper numbers jump eightfold". The Japan Times. Saga, Japan. 2013-05-30. Retrieved 2023-02-15.
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Boleophthalmus pectinirostris: Brief Summary

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Boleophthalmus pectinirostris, commonly known as the great blue spotted mudskipper and mutsugoro (むつごろう, mutsugoro), is a species of mudskipper native to the Northwest Pacific. It can be found on the coastlines of Japan, eastern China, Sumatra, Malaysia, Taiwan and the Korean Peninsula.

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