Pomacentrus aurifrons Allen, 2004 is a animal in the Pomacentridae family, order Perciformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Pomacentrus aurifrons Allen, 2004 (Pomacentrus aurifrons Allen, 2004)
🦋 Animalia

Pomacentrus aurifrons Allen, 2004

Pomacentrus aurifrons Allen, 2004

Pomacentrus aurifrons Allen, 2004 is a geminate coral reef fish species from Papua New Guinea named for its yellow forehead.

Family
Genus
Pomacentrus
Order
Perciformes
Class

About Pomacentrus aurifrons Allen, 2004

Pomacentrus aurifrons Allen, 2004 is a fish species found on the coral reefs of Papua New Guinea. This species resembles Pomacentrus smithi, sharing similar coloration and physical characteristics, and the two are thought to be geminate species. Per Allen's original description, P. aurifrons can be distinguished from related species by its specific color traits: a body that is pale grey to nearly white, with vertically elongated blue spots on the scales of the head, a blue streak on most body scales, a broad yellow region covering the snout, forehead, and base of the anterior dorsal spines, translucent fins with bluish soft rays on the dorsal, anal, and caudal fins, and a narrow yellow margin along the spinous dorsal fin. The species' scientific name comes from Latin words: auri means "gold", and frons means "forehead".

Photo: (c) Mark Rosenstein, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Mark Rosenstein · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Perciformes Pomacentridae Pomacentrus

More from Pomacentridae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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