Pholis is a genus of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the familyPholidae, the gunnels. These fishes are found in shallow coastal waters of the North Pacific, Arctic and North Atlantic Oceans.
Taxonomy
Pholis was first proposed as a genus in 1777 by the Italian naturalistGiovanni Antonio Scopoli. The type species was later designated to be Blennius gunnellus,[1] which Linnaeus had described in 1758 in the 10th edition of the Systema Naturae.[2] The genus is the only genus in the monotypicsubfamily Pholinae, one of two subfamilies in the family Pholidae.[3] The genus name Pholis is an Ancient Greek name for a fish that hides in a hole, the name dating at least as far back in history to Aristotle.[4]
Philos species have the elongate, compressed bodies of other gunnels. They differ on that there is no interorbital pore and that the head lacks scales or has small scales which are only present in larger adults.[6] These fishes vary in maximum published total length varying from 7.9 cm (3.1 in) in P. nea and 31 cm (12 in) in P. picta.[5]
Distribution, habitat and biology
Pholis gunnels are predominantly found in the temperate and boreal wasters of the North Pacific Ocean but P. fasciatus and P. gunnellus are found in the Arctic and North Atlantic Oceans, the only gunnels to occur outside the Pacific Ocean. These fishes are found in rocky areas in the intertidal zone and in the shallow waters below the low tide mark.[7] They feed on invertebrates and fish eggs. They are oviparous, laying eggs in a large mass which is guarded.[8]
^Yatsu, A. (1981). "A revision of the gunnel family Pholididae (Pisces, Blennioidei)". Bulletin of the National Science Museum. Series A (Zoology). 7 (4): 165–190.