NOTE
Facultative cleaning behavior
in a western Atlantic sponge goby, Elacatinus xanthiprora
(Teleostei: Gobiidae)
Benjamin C. Victor &
Frank H. Krasovec
Abstract
There are two large sets of brightly striped gobies
of the genus Elacatinus in the warm waters
of the western Atlantic Ocean: one that cleans larger
fishes at cleaning stations on coral reefs and another
set that live in and among sponges and are not known
to clean. The two sets of gobies are phylogenetically
separate as well, forming two independent monophyletic
sets of mtDNA-sequence lineages. At almost all locations
there are species of both groups present; however,
at the northern temperate limits, along the northeastern
coast of the Gulf of Mexico and along the east coast
of the USA at North Carolina (beyond the range of
coral-reef development), only one species is present
and it belongs to the sponge goby group. We report
here that the Yellowprow Goby, Elacatinus xanthiprora,
a member of the sponge goby group, regularly cleans
fishes, both in the northern Gulf of Mexico and off
North Carolina. Apparently, the absence of a local
cleaner species permits the evolution of facultative
cleaning behavior in a species from a group characterized
by the absence of that behavior.
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CITATION:
Victor, B.C. & Krasovec,
F.H. (2018) Facultative cleaning behavior in a western
Atlantic sponge goby, Elacatinus xanthiprora
(Teleostei: Gobiidae). Journal of the Ocean Science
Foundation, 31, 1-7.
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1412834
publication date: 11 September
2018
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