
Adult specimen with typical patterning
and orange-gold scattered spots.

Shoal of around 20 specimens on sandy beach adjacent to mangrove.

Rear view showing protuberant eyes and reddish dorsal fin edged with
black.
All images from Telunas Beach, Pulau Sugi, Riau Archipelago, Indonesia. |
The Gold-spotted
Mudskipper is a species of mangrove habitat which follows the sea's
edge as the tide falls and rises again. It can be found on various
substrates, from mudflats to adjacent sandy beaches.
Typically this mudskipper is seen in shoals numbering over 20 individuals.
The shoal moves in away in unison from any perceived threat.
The upper body is buff to medium grey, and the lower body cream to pale
grey. Orange-gold spots are randomly scattered along each flank. The pelvic
fins, on which mudskippers 'walk', are fused into a disk-like structure.
The front dorsal fin is typically reddish, with a thick black border fringed
with a thin white edge. In males, the first two spines of the front dorsal
fins extend beyond the fin itself : the first spine is twice as long as the
actual fin.
Burrows are dug at the seaward edge of mangrove forests, to which males
entice females by jumping. The species' diet is omnivorous.
The Gold-spotted Mudskipper is wide ranging and can be found in the Andaman
Sea (India, Burma, Thailand), the Gulf of Thailand, coastal Peninsular
Malaysia, Singapore and parts of Indonesia.
Family : GOBIIDAE
Species : Periophthalmus chrysospilos
Maximum Length : 13 cm
References : F2
Links :
The Mudskipper.org
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