caribbean fish slideshow # 1

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Caribbean Fish Slideshow # 1. Family groups from A - R 2008 Edition. Angelfish. Sweeping extensions from dorsal and anal fins Tough beaklike mouths one of the only fish that can EAT sponges. Immature French Angelfish. Black and yellow bars Rounded Tail with yellow border. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Caribbean FishSlideshow # 1

Family groups from A - R

2008 Edition

Angelfish

• Sweeping extensions from dorsal and anal fins

• Tough beaklike mouths– one of the only fish that can EAT sponges

Immature French Angelfish

• Black and yellow bars• Rounded Tail with

yellow border

French Angelfish

• Oval Shaped Body• Dorsal and anal fin

taper backwards• Blackbody with yellow

tickmarks• 10-14 inches

Gray Angelfish

• Oval Shaped Body• Gray body. • Yellow inner face of

pectoral fin. • Square-cut tail

• Juvenile:

Queen Angelfish

• Blue “crown” on top of head

• Yellow Tail

• Juvenile:

Immature Rock Beauty

• Yellow body• Black dot ringed in

brilliant blue

Rock Beauty

• Yellow forebody and tail

• Dorsal and anal fin taper backwards

Sea Bass

• Large and varied group

• Oval body shape

• Most have heavy lips

• Spiny anterior dorsal fin continuous with soft posterior dorsal fin on most bass

Coney• Blue Dots• Two dark spots on

lower lip• Highly variable

background color

Graysby

• Rounded tail• Dark spots found on

base of dorsal fin

Creole-fish

• Slightly forked tail• Red blotch at base of

pectoral fin• 3 dark spots below

base of dorsal fin

Harlequin bass

• Dark, vertical stripes

Tobacco fish

• Body is shades of orange to brown

• Dark C shaped border on tail

Red Hind

• Red blotches on body• Dorsal, tail, and anal

fin tipped in black

Fairy Basslet

• Distinct yellow and purple coloration

• Black spot on dorsal fin

Greater Soapfish

• Soaplike toxic mucus• Lay on side waiting to

gulp unwary prey

Goliath Grouper (Jewfish)

• Largest fish on the reef

• Small dark spots over body

3-6 feet long

Comb Grouper

• 3-4 lines slope down from eye/cheek to edge of gill cover

• Heavy “grouper” lips

Tiger Grouper

• “Tiger” stripes but NOT on head

• Red/brown spots fuse into stripes

• Often rest in cleaning stations

Nassau Grouper

1-2 feet

Bass: Hamlets

• Many color patterns

• Virtually identical in body shape/size

• Distinctive brow is straight (uncurved) from eyes down to mouth

Barred Hamlet

• Broad, v-shaped bar on the midbody

• Flat head easily identifies a hamlet

Butter Hamlet

• Distinct Hamlet slant on brow

• Large blotch saddles the base of the tail

Indigo Hamlet

• Hamlet forehead; straight slope from dorsal fin to lips

• Blue body with white bars

Shy Hamlet

• Body outlined in yellow

• Black dot on nostril outlined in blue

Yellowtail Hamlet

• Yellow tail• Hamlet forehead;

straight slope from dorsal fin to lips

Boxfishes:

• slow swimmers

• protected by a triangular bony “box” skeleton just under the skin

Smooth Trunkfish

• Dark body covered with white spots

• Area of pale honeycomb on midbody

• NO spines over eyes or under tail

Spotted Trunkfish

• Light body covered with dark spots

• NO honeycombed pattern

• No spines over eyes• Spines under tail

Honeycombed Cowfish

• Honeycomb pattern all over

• Spines over eyes and under tail (the cow’s “horns”)

Butterflyfish

• Oval shape

• Small, protruding mouth

• Eyes are usually disguised

• Dorsal and anal fins extend to meet tail fin

Banded Butterfly fish

• Two wide black midbody bands

• Noticeable butterflyfish mouth

Four-eye Butterflyfish

• Butterfly fish mouth and oval shape

• Black spot outlined in white

Longsnout Butterflyfish

• Butterfly fish mouth except noticeably elongated

Spotfin Butterflyfish

• One black bar near eye

• All fins are yellow• Black spot on tip of

dorsal fin

Damselfish

Sergeant Major

• Five black, vertical bars

• Adults may have yellow on base of dorsal fin

Threespot Damselfish• Black saddle on top of

caudal fin• Dark spot on base of

pectoral fin• Yellow crescent over

eye

• Juvenile:

Yellowtail Damselfish• Yellow Tail• Blue spots running

along the surface• Juvenile below:

Bicolor Damselfish

• Dark front & White tail portion

Dusky Damselfish

• Adult:

• Juvenile:

Eels

• Snake-like bodies

• No bony gill cover (operculum)

• Highly flexible for hunting inside the reef

• Many have lost pectoral fins

Garden Eels

• Visible in sand flats• Head pointed in the

direction of current• Will burrow when

threatened

(only about 4-8 inches exposed)

Sharptail Moray Eel

• Snakelike body• Yellow spots on head,

grading to white on body

1.5 – 3 feet

Goldentail Moray Eel

• Brown covered with yellow spots

Green moray eel

3-5 feet & thick as your leg

Grunts

• Related to snappers, but less toothy

• Most numerous on reefs with sand flats and seagrass beds

• Most bear longitudinal stripes

• Family includes Margates

Black Margate

• High back profile• Clear/white pectoral

fins• Dark tail

French Grunt

• Flattened Ventral surface

• Yellow bars do not run parallel; instead they meet at the lateral line

White Grunt

• Horizontal stripes absent on body but present on head

Bluestriped Grunt

• Blue stripes on yellow field

• Black margins on dorsal & tail fins

• Juvenile:

Smallmouthed Grunt

• 5-6 yellow stripes• fins yellow

Parrott Fish

• Very prominent scales

• “Beak” for grazing algae from reef– listen for the scraping sounds when they feed

• Dramatic change in appearance from juvenile adult phase

Midnight Parrotfish

• Parrotfish beak• All phases are dark

blue • BIG

Rainbow Parrotfish

• Parrotfish beak• BIG!• Juveniles green,

adults more colorful

Stoplight Parrotfish

• Adult stage• Notice the yellow dot

on operculum

• Juvenile:

Striped Parrotfish• Dark blue/purple tail

has yellow markings• Gold stripe behind

operculum stops abruptly

• Juveniles with three black stripes and white belly

Princess Parrotfish

• Yellow or orange stripe on lateral side fades gradually

• Immature: Black and white stripes along body; often confused with striped parrotfish

Queen Parrotfish

• Blue/Green “make-up” around mouth

• Blue bar on pect. fin

• Immature: broad white stripe on lateral surface

Greenblotch Parrotfish

• Deep on reef• Green blotch behind

gill cover• Small

• Juvenile:

Redband Parrotfish

• Note reddish band from mouth

• Note black & yellow spot above pectoral fin

• Juvenile:

Puffer Fish

• Ingest water when agitated– Many have spines that erect when they do this

Sharpnose Puffer

• Pointed nose• Blue lines seen

around eyes

Bandtail Puffer

• 2 bands on tail, but tail is rarely flared

• Row of blotches on pure white side

Porcupinefish

• Spots covering body• Spots on fin

Balloonfish or Spiny Puffer

• Long Spines on head• Dark spots on body• Clear fins

Rays

Southern Stingray• Snout & tips of

“wings” pointed• Note barb on tail

3-5 feet

Yellow Stingray

• Size of a dinner plate • Body is round• Stinger on tail

Spotted Eagle Ray

• Dolphin-like head• Several venomous

spines at base of tail

4 - 6 ½ feet

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