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The violet goby (Gobioides broussonnetii) is a species of goby native to marine, fresh and brackish waters near the Atlantic coast of North and South America from South Carolina in the United States of America, to northern Brazil. It prefers bays, estuaries and river mouths with muddy substrates. [2] It is often marketed as the dragon goby or ...
Brachygobius sabanus has a very similar appearance to the other goby species in the Brachygobius genus, which all have relatively small bodies and distinctive black and yellow stripes. [6] Fish in the this genus, including B. sabanus, are more cylindrical towards the anterior end of the body, and more compressed towards the posterior end. [7]
Sueviota aethon, the grumpy dwarfgoby, is a species of goby endemic to the Red Sea, and can grow to 17 millimetres (0.67 in) in length. It is closely related to members of the Eviota genus, possessing many similar characteristics such as morphology, ecology, and distribution. [1]
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Fossil of prehistoric ‘dragon’ — as big as a great white shark — unearthed in Japan. Look familiar? 115-million-year-old fossil is of something you might find in the yard.
Meganeura is a genus of extinct insects from the Late Carboniferous (approximately 300 million years ago). It is a member of the extinct order Meganisoptera, which are closely related to and resemble dragonflies and damselflies (with dragonflies, damselflies and meganisopterans being part of the broader group Odonatoptera).
Brachygobius aggregatus Herre, 1940 (Schooling bumblebee goby) Brachygobius doriae (Günther, 1868) (Bumblebee goby) Brachygobius kabiliensis Inger, 1958 (Kabili bumblebee goby) Brachygobius mekongensis Larson & Vidthayanon, 2000; Brachygobius nunus (F. Hamilton, 1822) Brachygobius sabanus Inger, 1958; Brachygobius sua (H. M. Smith, 1931)
Callogobius andamanensis Menon & Chatterjee, 1974 (Andaman flap-headed goby) Callogobius bauchotae Goren, 1979 (Bauchot's flap-headed goby) Callogobius bifasciatus (J. L. B. Smith, 1958) (Double-bar flap-headed goby) Callogobius bothriorrhynchus (Herzenstein, 1896) Callogobius centrolepis M. C. W. Weber, 1909 (Centre-scale flap-headed goby)