Shoshone sculpin
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Information for Authority record
Other Identifiers
Wikidata:
Q3320323
Library of congress:
sh2004144764
Sources of Information
- Work cat.: Kuda, D.B. Establishment of Shoshone sculpin (Cottus greenei) in a spring inhabited by mottled sculpin (C. Bairdi), in Great Basin naturalist, June 1993.
- ITIS, Oct. 22, 2007(Cottus greenei (Gilbert and Culver in Jordan and Evermann, 1898) -- valid -- Shoshone sculpin)
- NatureServe explorer, via WWW, Oct. 22, 2007(Cottus greenei, Shoshone Sculpin)
- NCBI taxonomy browser, Oct. 22, 2007(Cottus greenei. Synonyms: Uranidea greenei, Shoshone sculpin)
- FishBase, Oct. 22, 2007(Cottus greenei, Shoshone sculpin. Synonym: Uranidea greenei)
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Wikipedia description:
The Shoshone sculpin (Cottus greenei) is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish belonging to the family Cottidae, the typical sculpins. It is It is endemic to the United States. It inhabits spring systems in the Thousand Springs formation near Hagerman, south-central Idaho. It reaches a maximum length of 9.0 cm. The specific name honors Charles Wilson Greene who was an instructor in physiology at Stanford University and was on the expedition on which the type was collected from the Thousand Springs on the Snake River, near mouth of Salmon Falls River in Gooding County, Idaho.
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