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Animal Encyclopedia:

Sand stargazer

Dactyloscopus tridigitatus

FAMILY

Dactyloscopidae

TAXONOMY

Dactyloscopus tridigitatus Gill, 1859, Barbados.

OTHER COMMON NAMES

Spanish: MirĂ³n ojilargo.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

May reach lengths of 3 in (75 mm). A distinctive Atlantic sand stargazer with the eye perched on a slender stalk on top of the head. It differs from other Atlantic sand stargazers in that it has a tube in the last lateral line scale at the base of the caudal fin.

DISTRIBUTION

Bermuda, northeastern Gulf of Mexico, Bahamas, and the Caribbean as far as Brazil.

HABITAT

Soft, sandy bottoms from shallow water off beaches to depths of 98 ft (30 m).

BEHAVIOR

Burrows into the sand with only the stalked eyes on the top of the head exposed.

FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET

It is predatory on small prey, presumably invertebrates, but the sand stargazer has not been observed feeding.

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY

Oviparous. Males and females mature at about 1.8 in (45 mm) in length. Spawning had not been observed as of 2002.

CONSERVATION STATUS

Not listed by the IUCN. Pollution is the biggest potential threat.

SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS

None known.

 
 
WordNet: sand stargazer
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: small pallid fishes of shoal tropical waters of North and South America having eyes on stalks atop head; they burrow in sand to await prey


 
Wikipedia: sand stargazer
Sand stargazers
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Suborder: Blennioidei
Family: Dactyloscopidae
Genera

Dactylagnus
Dactyloscopus
Gillellus
Heteristius
Leurochilus
Myxodagnus
Platygillellus
Sindoscopus
Storrsia

Sand stargazers are blennioids; perciform marine fish of the odd family Dactyloscopidae. Found in temperate to tropical waters of North and South America; some may also inhabit brackish environments.. There are 44 species in nine genera represented, the giant sand stargazer (Dactylagnus mundus) being the largest at 15 centimetres in length; all other species are under 10 centimetres.

These blennies are named well: sand stargazers have protruding eyes on the top of their heads, fixed in an upward gaze, and may be on stalks. Their large mouths are also upturned. The dorsal fin is long and may or may not be continuous, with 7-23 spines; the pelvic fins are situated below the throat and possess one spine. The anal fin is equally long and flowing. The mouth is fringed, and like the upper edge of the operculum (the gill cover), this fringe is divided into finger-like structures. The body is greatly elongate and coloration is generally drab.

As their name would suggest, sand stargazers spend most of their time buried in sandy substrates waiting for unsuspecting prey; only the eyes, nose and mouth are usually visible. Their mode of respiration is also unique among the blennioids, utilizing a branchiostegal rather than opercular pump; this is thought to be an adaptation to their largely sedentary, obscured lives. Sand stargazers generally stay within shallow (< 10 metres) intertidal zones in areas protected from surges. Small invertebrates and fishes make up the bulk of the sand stargazer's diet.

The family name Dactyloscopidae derives from the Greek words daktylos meaning "finger" (a reference to the divided mouth and operculum fringes) and skopein meaning "to watch".

References


 
 

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Copyrights:

Animal Encyclopedia. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sand stargazer" Read more

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