California Fish Species

Tidewater Goby

  • Scientific Name
    Eucyclogobius newberryi
  • Native
    Native Species
  • Identification

    Tidewater goby. Captured from Lake Earl (a coastal lagoon in Del Norte County, CA) in 2007. Size: approximately 48 mm (2
    Tidewater goby. Captured from Lake Earl (a coastal lagoon in Del Norte County, CA) in 2007. Size: approximately 48 mm (2") long. Photo by Carl Page, ARS Consulting.

    Tidewater goby. Captured from Big Lagoon, CA, on 5/9/2006, with a pole seine during a US Fish and Wildlife Service workshop.  Size: approximately 45 mm long. Photo by Zack Larson.
    Tidewater goby. Captured from Big Lagoon, CA, on 5/9/2006, with a pole seine during a US Fish and Wildlife Service workshop. Size: approximately 45 mm long. Photo by Zack Larson.

    Tidewater goby (anterior view). Captured from Lake Earl (a coastal lagoon in Del Norte County, CA) in 2007. Size: approximately 48 mm (2
    Tidewater goby (anterior view). Captured from Lake Earl (a coastal lagoon in Del Norte County, CA) in 2007. Size: approximately 48 mm (2") long. Photo by Carl Page, ARS Consulting.

    • Small, rarely exceed 50 mm SL
    • Pelvic fins united to form a suction cup
    • Long blunt tail, scales often absent from head and underside
    • Large oblique mouth, maxilla extends past eye
    • Eyes set wide, close to snout
    • Body coloration (living fish almost translucent): gray, brown, or olive with dark speckled backs and sides
    • Dorsal fins mottled
      • 1st dorsal: upper tip clear to cream colored
      • 2nd dorsal: symmetrical, longer than 1st dorsal
    • Dusky anal fin
    • Breeding females: sides, dorsal and anal fins black
    • Fin spines/rays: 1st dorsal 6-7 spines, 2nd dorsal 9-13 rays, anal 9-12 rays
    • Lateral line scales: 66-70
  • Life History

     

    Tidewater gobies occupy cool (16-25oC) brackish water in lagoons created by coastal streams. Gobies favor salinities less than 10 ppt but may survive at levels up to 40 ppt. The lagoons may become isolated in dry summer months threatening gobies when the water is not well-oxygenated. In contrast high flows and tidal environments can have a greater negative affect on goby populations than predators. Favorable habitat includes shallow open water with emergent vegetation. Aquatic vegetation is important for protection and presumably feeding, while open water is important to breeding. Gobies are found in the greatest population densities within emergent or submerged vegetation. Juvenile tidewater gobies may move as far as 12 km and share habitat with a variety of fish species depending upon their distribution. Gobies feed by capturing prey in one of three ways: sediment sifting, midwater capture, or plucking individuals from the bottom. They feed opportunistically and primary food sources change throughout the year. Prey items include benthic organisms such as aquatic insects and small crustaceans. Adults feed primarily at dawn and dusk while juvenile gobies feed around the clock. Tidewater gobies rarely live more than a year and breeding may occur multiple times during a period of several months. Spawning may occur year round but it is less frequent in December through March. Female gobies produce an average of 15 to 1,100 eggs per spawn, and may spawn up to 12 times over the course of several months. Gobies are capable of rapid re-colonization and rebound from low numbers quickly. Spawning among tidewater gobies is sometimes preceded by elaborate courtship and competitive behavior. Males and females typically only breed with one member of the opposite sex per spawning session. Male gobies create burrows where one female enters for 1 - 3 days. Fertilized eggs are attached to a burrow wall and left by the females. Male gobies guard and attend to the embryos for 9-11 days. Once the embryos hatch they take on a planktonic form and the male goby abandons the young. Young gobies become benthic again when they reach a standard length of 16-18 mm.

  • Links to Other Research
    N / A
  • Watershed
    • Alisal-Elkhorn Sloughs Watershed
    • Aliso-San Onofre Watershed
    • Big-Navarro-Garcia Watershed
    • Bodega Bay Watershed
    • Calleguas Watershed
    • Carmel Watershed
    • Central Coastal Watershed
    • Chetco Watershed
    • Gualala-Salmon Watershed
    • Los Angeles Watershed
    • Lower Eel Watershed
    • Mad-Redwood Watershed
    • Mattole Watershed
    • Newport Bay Watershed
    • Pajaro Watershed
    • Russian Watershed
    • Salinas Watershed
    • Salmon Watershed
    • San Antonio Watershed
    • San Diego Watershed
    • San Francisco Coastal South Watershed
    • San Lorenzo-Soquel Watershed
    • San Luis Rey-Escondido Watershed
    • Santa Ana Watershed
    • Santa Barbara Coastal Watershed
    • Santa Clara Watershed
    • Santa Margarita Watershed
    • Santa Maria Watershed
    • Santa Monica Bay Watershed
    • Santa Ynez Watershed
    • Smith Watershed
    • Tomales-Drake Bays Watershed
    • Ventura Watershed

Please note, watersheds are at the USGS 8-digit Hydrologic Unit Code (HUC) scale, so they often include a lot of sub-watersheds.  If a species occurs in any sub-watershed within the HUC, the species appears within the HUC.  Link to an EPA page that shows HUCs.