All Species Animalia

Tridentiger bifasciatus Steindachner, 1881 is a animal in the Gobiidae family, order Perciformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Tridentiger bifasciatus Steindachner, 1881 (Tridentiger bifasciatus Steindachner, 1881)
Animalia

Tridentiger bifasciatus Steindachner, 1881

Tridentiger bifasciatus Steindachner, 1881

Tridentiger bifasciatus, the Shimofuri goby, is an Asian goby species introduced to California waterways via ship ballast water.

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Family
Genus
Tridentiger
Order
Perciformes
Class

About Tridentiger bifasciatus Steindachner, 1881

Common Name and Habitat Preference

Commonly called the Shimofuri goby, Tridentiger bifasciatus lives in fresh and brackish waters, and reaches its highest abundance in low-salinity environments.

Maximum Length

The species displays the typical morphological traits of the family Gobiidae, and grows to a maximum length of 12 centimetres (4.7 in).

Key Morphological Features

Key defining features include two pelvic fins that unite to form a conical sucking disk, a spiny anterior dorsal fin paired with a soft posterior dorsal fin, and eyes positioned near the top of the head.

Fin Characteristics

These fins usually have 6-7 spines and 11-14 rays, and carry orange tints along their edges.

Head Shape and Coloration

Tridentiger bifasciatus has a flat, wide head and is highly variable in coloration; it is most often light or dark brown, with midlateral spots and very small white spots across the head.

Native Range

Its native range covers fresh and brackish water habitats across Asia, including Japan, Korea, China, Taiwan, and the former Soviet Union.

Current Native Distribution

It remains distributed in its native Asian estuaries across China, South Korea, Japan, and Russia.

Non-Native Estuary Establishment

The Shimofuri goby is widely established in the San Francisco estuary.

Southern California Spread by 1990

By 1990, the species had spread south to Pyramid Lake in Los Angeles County.

Southern California Reservoir Records by 2016

By 2016, it had been recorded in seven southern California reservoirs.

North American Observation Locations

Observations of the species have been made at nine total locations in North America: Los Angeles, Lower Sacramento, San Diego, San Francisco Bay, San Joaquin Delta, San Pablo Bay, Santa Clara, Santa Margarita, and Suisun Bay.

Introduction Mechanism Origin

The Shimofuri goby is thought to have been first introduced to non-native ranges via cargo ship ballast water in 1985.

Ballast Water Purpose

Ballast water is water held within a cargo ship to maintain vessel stability and improve maneuverability when the ship is not carrying a heavy load.

Ballast Water Discharge Process

When cargo is loaded onto the ship, ballast water is pumped out to adjust for the added weight.

Species Dispersal Pathway

This process creates a pathway that allows aquatic species to travel between regions they could not reach on their own.

Photo: (c) Zayd Wheeler, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Zayd Wheeler · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Perciformes Gobiidae Tridentiger

More from Gobiidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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