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Estuarine pipefish

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Estuarine pipefish
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Syngnathiformes
Family: Syngnathidae
Genus: Syngnathus
Species:
S. watermeyeri
Binomial name
Syngnathus watermeyeri

The estuarine pipefish or river pipefish (Syngnathus watermeyeri) is a species of fish in the family Syngnathidae. It is endemic to South Africa and has been sporadically recorded in the estuarine portions of the Kariega, Kasouga, Bushmans, East Kleinemonde and West Kleinemonde Rivers. It can be readily distinguished from another southern African pipefish with which it shares its habitat, S. temminckii, by its much shorter snout. The estuarine pipefish is most commonly found in beds of the eelgrass Zostera capensis.[2] Although twice thought to be extinct, recent[when?] surveys have found juvenile Estuarine Pipefish in areas where it had not been reported in over four decades.[1]

This species of pipefish is Critically Endangered due to both natural and human threats to the brackish estuaries and local eelgrass beds in which they live.[1]

The type was a female of 110 millimetres (4.3 in) collected in the Bushmans River and sent to J.L.B. Smith by F.L.E. Watermeyer, whom Smith homoured in the newly described species' specific name.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c Pollom, R. (2017). "Syngnathus watermeyeri". The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T41030A67621860. Retrieved 9 June 2018.
  2. ^ Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2018). "Syngnathus watermeyeri" in FishBase. February 2018 version.
  3. ^ J.L.B. Smith (1963). "Fishes of the family Syngnathidae from the Red Sea and the western Indian Ocean". Ichthyological Bulletin, Department of Ichthyology, Rhodes University. 27: 515–543.