Skip to main content
636 Featured Specimen
Round goby

Details

Round goby

Neogobius melanostomus

Size
8–25 cm · 10–200 g
Diet
Carnivore
Activity
Cathemeral
Sociality
Loose group
Lifespan

A bottom-dwelling goby native to the Black Sea and Caspian region, notorious as an invasive fish in places such as the Great Lakes.

Range

Habitat range map
Native range Occasional / Transient
PalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearctic

Map: Ecoregions 2017 © RESOLVE (CC BY 4.0) · Natural Earth (PD)

Details

Habitat

Uses brackish waters, estuaries, lakes, and lower rivers with rocky, sandy, or muddy bottoms. Ballast water helped it spread to North America.

Appearance

The body is stout and mottled gray-brown. The pelvic fins are fused into a suction-disc that helps it cling to the bottom.

Behavior

It swims in short bursts near the bottom and defends crevices or artificial structures. Males guard breeding sites.

Feeding

It eats mussels, small crustaceans, aquatic insects, fish eggs, and small fish, competing with native fishes in invaded waters.

Reproduction

From spring to summer, males guard cavities where females attach eggs to ceilings or rock surfaces. Males care for the eggs until hatching.

Notes

Round goby tolerates fresh and brackish water and can alter invaded food webs, making it a well-known invasive species.