Scientists have named a small maroon and gold fish
species after the U.S. President Barack Obama which was discovered 300
feet deep in the waters off Kure Atoll in the Pacific ocean.
The fish, of the genus Tosanoides, was named in honour of Obama for his commitment to protecting nature through the expansion of the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument, researchers said.
It was discovered in June this year during a research trip to Kure, the world’s northernmost atoll.
Atolls ring-shaped reef, island, or chain of islands formed of corals.
The
fish is found only within the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National
Monument, a World Heritage site encompassing 1,510,000 square kilometres
of ocean waters, including ten islands and atolls of the Northwestern
Hawaiian Islands.
The
site is the largest swath of protected land or water on Earth, and is
home to millions of seabirds, endangered turtles, endangered monk seals,
and more than 7,000 species.
Richard Pyle, a marine
biologist at the Bishop Museum in Hawaii, was underwater when he first
saw a group of fish he did not recognise, the ‘National Geographic’
reported.
He collected a male specimen for further
analysis. The female specimen was collected a few days later by Bishop
Museum affiliate Brian Greene at an atoll about 249 km from Kure.
Researchers confirmed that the fish represented a new species, the
first member of the genus Tosanoides found outside of the waters off
Japan.
This is not the first fish to be named after President Obama. A species of darters found only in the Duck River and the
Buffalo River in U.S. was named Etheostoma obama in 2012.
More Photos after the cut...



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