<p>Scientists have named a small maroon and gold fish species after the US President Barack Obama which was discovered 300 feet deep in the waters off Kure Atoll in the Pacific ocean.<br /><br /></p>.<p>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.<br /><br />It was discovered in June this year during a research trip to Kure, the world's northernmost atoll.<br /><br />Atolls ring-shaped reef, island, or chain of islands formed of corals.<br /><br />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.<br /><br />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.<br /><br />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.<br /><br />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 kilometres from Kure.<br /><br />Researchers confirmed that the fish represented a new species, the first member of the genus Tosanoides found outside of the waters off Japan.<br /><br />This is not the first fish to be named after Obama. A species of darters found only in the Duck River and the Buffalo River in US was named Etheostoma obama in 2012. <br /></p>
<p>Scientists have named a small maroon and gold fish species after the US President Barack Obama which was discovered 300 feet deep in the waters off Kure Atoll in the Pacific ocean.<br /><br /></p>.<p>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.<br /><br />It was discovered in June this year during a research trip to Kure, the world's northernmost atoll.<br /><br />Atolls ring-shaped reef, island, or chain of islands formed of corals.<br /><br />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.<br /><br />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.<br /><br />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.<br /><br />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 kilometres from Kure.<br /><br />Researchers confirmed that the fish represented a new species, the first member of the genus Tosanoides found outside of the waters off Japan.<br /><br />This is not the first fish to be named after Obama. A species of darters found only in the Duck River and the Buffalo River in US was named Etheostoma obama in 2012. <br /></p>