- Source: Gobiodon citrinus
Gobiodon citrinus, the poison goby, is a species of goby native to the Indian Ocean from the Red Sea and the coast of Africa to the western Pacific Ocean to Japan, Samoa and the Great Barrier Reef. They are reef dwellers being found at depths of from 2 to 20 metres (7 to 66 ft) and in association with Acropora corals. The mucus produced by this fish is toxic. They grow to a length of 6.6 centimetres (2.6 in) TL. They have varied body colour and could be either dark brown, or pale yellow. They also have blue vertical lines that go around their eyes and gills. This species is also found in the aquarium trade and has been reared in the aquarium.
References
Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.). "Gobiodon citrinus". FishBase. December 2008 version.
External links
Clown Goby, Citrinis
Gobiodon citrinus
Gobiodon citrinus from New Caledonia Archived 2017-03-28 at the Wayback Machine
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Bekut kuning-limau
- Bekut-karang kuning
- Gobiodon citrinus
- Gobiodon
- Yellow clown goby
- List of reef fish of the Red Sea
- List of fishes of India
- List of marine aquarium fish species
- Corallivore
- List of fishes of the Coral Sea
- List of fishes of the Houtman Abrolhos
- List of least concern perciform fishes