Profundulus oaxacae

Profundulus oaxacae
Profundulus oaxacae
Profundulus oaxacae
Profundulus oaxacae
Profundulus oaxacae
Profundulus oaxacae
Profundulus oaxacae
English Name: 
Río Atoyac Killifish
Mexican Name: 
Escamudo del río Atoyac
Original Description: 

  MEEK, S. E. (1902): A contribution to the ichthyology of Mexico. Field Columbian Museum, Zoological, 3 (1902): pp 63–128.

Etymology: 

  Seth Eugene Meek collected the type specimens in the Río Verde in the federal state of Oaxaca and named the species after the state. The species name means translated "Oaxaca's Profundulus". The denotation Oaxaca itself comes from the Nahuatl word "Huaxyacac", which refers to the white leadtree (Leucaena leucocephala), a common tree found around the capital city Oaxaca de Júarez.

  The genus Profundulus was erected by Carl Leavitt Hubbs in 1924 after recognizing differences to Fundulus in "several important respects". For him, "as the more generalized members of Fundulus, Cynolebias and some other american genera of the Cyprinodontidae, as well as the less specialized Goodeidae, resemble the species of Profundulus in habitus, it seems not improbable that Profundulus, of all american genera, diverges least from a general ancestral cyprinodont type." The ancient Greek word "pro" (πρό) means "before", so the name of the genus refers to this fact, that Hubbs believed that the members of Profundulus are basal to Fundulus. The genus Fundulus again can be derived from the Latin word "fundus" which means bottom; the suffix "-ulus" is also of Latin origin and indicates a diminutive. The genus Profundulus can therefore be translated with "before or older than the little one from the bottom". This odd name is in connection with the English expression "mud minnow" for Fundulus heteroclitus, with the name originating from its method of avoiding freezing during the winter months. When winter arrives, they burrow their way into the sediment and mud at the bottom of their habitat.