Frillfin goby
(Bathygobius soporator)

Classification

Species: Bathygobius soporator

General data

Scientific names: Frillfin goby
Habitat: Amfidromous
Climate: Subtropical

The frillfin goby (Bathygobius soporator) is a species of marine fish in the genus Bathygobius.

The frillfin goby is a usually dark colored goby with mottled coloring of black, gray, and tan, but body color is variable between habitats. It has a thin, gray-green first dorsal fin and a trailing second dorsal fin of the same color. Its brown eyes are proportionally large. Its cheeks are large. The caudal, anal, pectoral, and pelvic fins are a transparent yellow. The pelvic fins of the frillfin goby has one spine and five rays that are close together.

The frillfin goby is capable of cognitive mapping: it can create a mental map of the typography of the intertidal zones around. This allows the fish to leap to a neighbouring pool without the risk of falling on the dry rock doomed to die in the sun. We believed that such capacity of intelligence was exclusive to humans until discovered in rats in the late 1940s.

The frillfin goby feeds on small crustaceans, like copepods, and small fishes like the tilapia fry. The frillfin can also feed on insects, detritus, bivalves, and gastropods.

Individuals are often found in tide pools, around mangrove trees, or in sheltered seagrass beds. The Frillfin goby can be found in marine, brackish, and even freshwater, and it can tolerate a wide range of salinities.

Eastern Atlantic: Senegal to Angola, including the islands of the Gulf of Guinea. Mediterranean Sea.

Western Atlantic: Florida Keys in the USA, Bermuda and the Bahamas to Santa Catarina, Brazil.