- Bermuda killifish
Taxobox
name = Bermuda killifish
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis =Actinopterygii
ordo =Cyprinodontiformes
familia =Fundulidae
genus = "Fundulus "
species = "F. bermudae"
binomial = "Fundulus bermudae"
binomial_authority = Günther, 1874The Bermuda killifish ("Fundulus bermudae") is a small
fish which is endemic to the islands ofBermuda in the westernAtlantic Ocean . It belongs to thegenus "Fundulus " in theFundulidae family ofkillifish and topminnows.It can grow up to 12.9 centimetres in length and 21.4 grams in weight. The male is dark green with a yellow underside and a dark spot on the
dorsal fin when spawning. The female is brown or olive in colour, paler below.It was formerly common in fresh and brackish ponds and marshes throughout Bermuda. It has a declined as a result of destruction and modification of its habitat by humans and was listed as a protected species in the Bermuda Protected Species Act of 2003. It is currently known from just seven ponds:
Mangrove Lake ,Trott's Pond , West and East Walsingham Ponds, Warwick Pond, Evan's Pond and an introduced population in Blue Hole Pond. The populations in Lover's Lake and Bartram's Pond are now thought to be a separate species,Lover's Lake killifish ("F. relictus"). Some of the other populations of Bermuda killifish may also be separate species.It is omnivorous and its diet includes
green algae ,mollusc s,crustacean s andinsect s. Itspredator s includeheron s,grey snapper s andAmerican eel s as well as the introducedeastern mosquitofish andred-eared terrapin .References
*FishBase species | genus = Fundulus | species = bermudae | year = 2008 | month = January
*Outerbridge, Mark E.; Davenport, John & Glasspool, Anne F. (2007) [http://www.aphanius.dk/Distribution,%20population%20assessment%20and%20conservation%20of%20the%20endemic%20Barmuda%20killifishes%20F.%20bermudae%20and%20F.%20relictus.pdf Distribution, population assessment and conservation of the endemic Bermuda killifishes "Fundulus bermudae" and "Fundulus relictus"] , "Endangered Species Research", 3: 181-189.
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