Clingfishes Temporal range: 23.03-0 Ma
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Aspasmichthys ciconiae | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Actinopterygii |
Clade: | Percomorpha |
(unranked): | Ovalentaria |
Order: | Gobiesociformes |
Family: | Gobiesocidae Bleeker, 1860 |
Type species | |
Gobiesox cephalus Lacépède, 1800
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Clingfishes are ray-finned fishes of the family Gobiesocidae, the only family in the suborder Gobiesocoidei of the order Blenniiformes.[1] These fairly small to very small fishes are widespread in tropical and temperate regions, mostly near the coast, but a few species live in deeper seas or fresh water. Most species shelter in shallow reefs or seagrass beds, clinging to rocks, algae and seagrass leaves with their sucking disc, a structure on their chest.[2][3]
They are generally too small to be of interest to fisheries, although the relatively large Sicyases sanguineus regularly is caught as a food fish,[4] and some of the other species occasionally appear in the marine aquarium trade.[2]