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Text and photos by Nick Baker, unless otherwise stated

 EcologyAsia 2008
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Yellow-spotted Mudskipper
   

Clinging to a tree root at high tide, Sungei Buloh, Singapore.


Specimen with dark, dorsal barring, Sungei Buloh, Singapore.


Venturing onto mudflats at low tide, Khatib Bongsu, Singapore.

This large mudskipper is regarded as uncommon, but can be easily located in parts of Singapore. It has been observed venturing onto mudflats at low tide, and clinging to mangrove roots at high tide.

The dorsum and flanks are pale to dark  brown, adorned with numerous pale speckles. Some specimens may have dark dorsal barring, and immediately behind the eye there is sometimes a short, dark stripe.

The front dorsal fin is dark brown, with a somewhat darker edge and thin, whitish to transparent margin. The Yellow-spotted Mudskipper can be distinguished from another similarly large species, the Giant Mudskipper Periophthalmodon schlosseri, by the absence of bluish-white speckles on the cheeks.

The snout is blunt, and the large eyes typically protuberant.

The species constructs its burrows in the mangrove of the upper parts of the intertidal zone.

This mudskipper occurs on the Andaman Sea coast of Southern Thailand, and in the Straits of Malacca off Peninsular Malaysia's west coast. In Singapore it can be found in the northerly mangroves at Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve and Khatib Bongsu facing onto the Johor Straits which separate Singapore from Malaysia. 
 

Family : GOBIIDAE
Species : Periophthalmus walailakae
Maximum Length : 13 cm

References : F2

Links : The Mudskipper.org