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Diagnostic Description

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Adults have 2-4 supraorbital spines, a short-based and deeply notched dorsal fin, and are transparent and silvery with dusky scale edges (Ref. 33616).
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Recorder
Susan M. Luna
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Morphology

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Dorsal spines (total): 7 - 8; Dorsal soft rays (total): 9 - 10; Analspines: 3; Analsoft rays: 10 - 11; Vertebrae: 24
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Susan M. Luna
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Trophic Strategy

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Inhabits brackish mangrove estuaries, tidal creeks and lower reaches of freshwater streams. Aggregations are common among mangrove roots, log snags and aquatic vegetation (Ref. 44894). Occurs in lotic and lentic freshwater as well as in mangrove areas (Ref. 7300).
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Christine Marie V. Casal
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Biology

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Inhabits brackish mangrove estuaries, tidal creeks and lower reaches of freshwater streams. Aggregations are common among mangrove roots, log snags and aquatic vegetation (Ref. 44894). Occurs in lotic and lentic freshwater as well as in mangrove areas (Ref. 7300), forming schools (Ref. 33616).
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Pascualita Sa-a
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Ambassis marianus

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Ambassis marianus, commonly known as the estuary perchlet, Ramsay's glassfish, estuary glassfish or glass perchlet, is a species of fish in the family Ambassidae. It is native to coastal eastern Australia. It gains its common name from its transparent appearance.

Taxonomy

German-British naturalist Albert Günther described Ambassis marianus in 1880 from a specimen collected from the Mary River near the village of Tiaro, some twenty miles upstream from Maryborough, on an expedition in May 1874.[2] William John Macleay described a specimen from Port Jackson (Sydney) as Pseudoambassis ramsayi.[3] Charles Walter De Vis described Pseudoambassis convexus from a Queensland specimen in 1884.[4] Both of these are now regarded as synonyms of Ambassis marianus.[5]

This species and the co-occurring Port Jackson glassfish (A. jacksoniensis) are the only two members of the genus found in temperate waters. The others are found in the waters of northern Australia and southeast Asia.[5]

Distribution and habitat

It is native to coastal eastern Australia, from Maryborough in central Queensland through to Narooma in southern New South Wales. It lives in estuaries and protected brackish tidal streams that have mangroves growing along the margins.[1]

Ecology

A controlled study comparing six native fish species with the introduced (and invasive) eastern mosquitofish (Gambusia holbrooki) on consuming larvae of the common banded mosquito (Culex annulirostris) in Brisbane found that the estuary glassfish was as efficient at eating mosquito larvae as the eastern mosquitofish and is a good candidate for mosquito control.[6]

References

  1. ^ a b c Jenkins, A.; Kullander, F.F.; Tan, H.H. (2009). "Ambassis marianus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2009: e.T169356A6610748. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2009-2.RLTS.T169356A6610748.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ Günther, Albert (1880). "Report on the Shore Fishes procured during the Voyage of H.M.S. Challenger in the Years 1873-1876". Zoology. 1: 1–82 [30–33].
  3. ^ Macleay, William John (1881). "Descriptive catalogue of the fishes of Australia. Part 1". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 5 (3): 302–444 [340]. doi:10.5962/bhl.part.15887.
  4. ^ De Vis, Charles Walter (1884). "New Australian fishes in the Queensland Museum". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 9 (2): 389–400 [394].
  5. ^ a b Allen, Gerald R.; Burgess, Warren E. (1990). "A review of the glassfishes (Chandidae) of Australia and New Guinea" (PDF). Records of the Western Australian Museum. 34: 139–206 [173–75].
  6. ^ Hurst, Timothy P.; Brown, Michael D.; Kay, Brian H. (2004). "Laboratory evaluation of the predation efficacy of native Australian fish on Culex annulirostris (Diptera: Culicidae)" (PDF). Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association. 20 (3): 286–91. PMID 15532929.
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Ambassis marianus: Brief Summary

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Ambassis marianus, commonly known as the estuary perchlet, Ramsay's glassfish, estuary glassfish or glass perchlet, is a species of fish in the family Ambassidae. It is native to coastal eastern Australia. It gains its common name from its transparent appearance.

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