Alabes Explained
Alabes is a genus of clingfishes endemic to Australia along the coasts of the Indian and Pacific Oceans. They are small, eel-like fishes with narrow tapering bodies and small heads.[1]
Species
The currently recognized species in this genus are:
- Alabes bathys Hutchins, 2006
- Alabes brevis V. G. Springer & T. H. Fraser, 1976
- Alabes dorsalis (J. Richardson, 1845) (common shore-eel)
- Alabes elongata Hutchins & S. M. Morrison, 2004
- Alabes gibbosa Hutchins & S. M. Morrison, 2004
- Alabes hoesei V. G. Springer & T. H. Fraser, 1976 (dwarf shore-eel)
- Alabes obtusirostris Hutchins & S. M. Morrison, 2004
- Alabes occidentalis Hutchins & S. M. Morrison, 2004
- Alabes parvula (McCulloch, 1909) (pygmy shore-eel)
- Alabes scotti Hutchins & S. M. Morrison, 2004
- Alabes springeri Hutchins, 2006
Notes and References
- Web site: Bray. Dianne. Genus Alabes. Fishes of Australia. 29 September 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20170521045253/http://fishesofaustralia.net.au/home/genus/32. 21 May 2017. dead.