Coastal fish, also called offshore fish or neritic fish,
inhabit the sea between the shoreline and the edge of the continental
shelf. Since the continental shelf is usually less than 200 metres deep, it
follows that pelagic coastal fish are generally epipelagic fish, inhabiting the sunlit epipelagic
zone. Coastal fish can be contrasted with ocean fish, which inhabit the
oceans beyond the continental shelves.
Coastal fish are the most abundant in the world. They can be
found in tidal
pools, fjords
and estuaries,
near sandy shores and rocky coastlines, around coral reefs
and on or above the continental shelf. Coastal fish include forage fish
and the predator fish that feed on them. Forage fish thrive
in inshore waters where high productivity results from upwelling and
shoreline run off of nutrients. Some are partial residents that spawn in
streams, estuaries and bays, but most complete their life cycles in the zone.
Coastal habitats
Coastal fish are found in the waters above the continental
shelves that extend from the continental shorelines,
and around the coral reefs that surround volcanic islands. The total
world shoreline extends for 356,000 km (221,000 mi) and the
continental shelves occupy a total area of 24.286 million km2 (9 376
million sq mi). This is about 4.8% of the world's total area of 510.072 million
km2.
Nearshore fish
Nearshore fish, sometimes called littoral fish, live
close to the shore. They are associated with the intertidal
zone, or with estuaries, lagoons, coral reefs, kelp
forests, seagrass meadows, or rocky or sandy bottoms,
usually in shallow waters less than about 10 m deep.
Intertidal fish
Intertidal fish are fish that move in and out with the tide in the intertidal
zone of the seashore,
or are found in rock pools or under rocks.
The intertidal zone of rocky shores can contain
indentations which trap pools of salty water, called rock pools.
Living in these habitats are communities of hardy plant and animal species
specially adapted for coping with the volatile environment around them. The
plants and animals interact with each other and with the rock pool to form
miniature ecosystems,
easily accessible to students and a source of fascination for young children.
Plants such as seaweeds,
cnidarians such as sea anemones, arthropods like barnacles, and molluscs such as
the common limpet
and the common periwinkle can be permanent residents of
rock pools. But most rock pool animals, such as crabs, shrimp and fish are
just temporary residents, occupying a rock pool only until the next tide takes
them to a new location.
Some rock pool fish which are temporary residents include
the long-spined sea scorpion, the pipefish
worm, the rock
goby and the common lumpsucker. However some other rock pool fish are
territorial in nature, and will stay with the same pool for extended periods.
Examples are the common blenny and its near relative the butterfish.
- The common blenny, also known as the shanny, is found in northern temperate waters. They hide under rocks and in crannies in rock pools when the tide is out. They feed on green seaweed and invertebrates such as barnacles. They can crawl on dry land, using their paired fins. About 16 cm long, they have smooth skin, without scales, and are covered with soft slime. The slime prevents them drying if they are stranded on a shore between tides. So long as their skin stays moist, they can breathe out of water. They are sometimes called "sea frogs" because they bask in the sun on weeds outside the water, and like frogs, jump to safety when disturbed. They can change their colour to match their surroundings. The female lays eggs in crevices or under stones and the male guards them until they hatch. In the winter, when storms can be severe, they move out of their rock pools into the shallows. The common blenny is bold with strong teeth, and will bite humans if it feels threatened.
- The rock goby is a small fish, about 12 cm long, found in northern temperate waters. It is coloured black with white blotches, and hides under stones and amongst seaweed. It is a temporary resident of rock pools when the tide is out. The female rock goby lays eggs on the underside of rocks and shells and then leaves them. The male guards the eggs until they hatch. First-year rock gobies often visit rock pools in winter when the older fish have left.
Smooth lumpsucker inflated in a defensive response.
- The long-spined sea scorpion, a small stout fish which grows about 29 cm long, is another temporary resident of rocky pools. They have large black eyes, a large mouth, and four long spines—two on each side on the gill cover—that stick out when the fish is removed from the water. They also have an organ like a finger on each side of their mouths which helps them catch prey. Because of their broad heads, they are also called "bullheads". They have a variety of effective camouflaged colours ranging from shades of browns with cream blotches, to orange and red with white blotches. They can also change their body colour to match their surroundings. They are found around the coasts of Northern Europe in shallow rocky waters hiding amongst seaweed. They are also found in rock pools and sometimes in waters 30 m deep. Long-spined sea scorpions lay eggs amongst seaweed or attached to rock crevices. The young hatch after two or three weeks, and go through several development stages before maturing into adults.
- Lumpsuckers are found in temperate northern waters. They live on the seafloor, and are temporary residents of rocky pools in late winter and early spring when they spawn. The body of the lumpsucker is scaleless and covered with small lumps. They have a large sucking disc on their underside which they use to cling to surfaces. They are normally a blue to slate-grey colour, and are effectively camouflaged to look like stones. They are portly, nearly spherical, poor swimmers, reaching lengths up to 50 cm. After the female lumpsucker lays eggs, the male takes over, clamping itself to a rock where it guards the eggs. When they hatch, lumpsuckers look like tiny tadpoles. They remain in shallow water and rock pools, hiding amongst seaweed and rocks, until they grow up.
This estuary of the Klamath
River is a transition zone between a freshwater
river environment and a saltwater marine environment. Due to land runoff,
river mouths and estuary waters can be turbid and nutrient rich, sometimes to
the point of eutrophication.
Estuaries are partly enclosed coastal bodies of water with
one or more rivers
or streams
flowing into them, and with a free connection to the open sea. These brackish
water habitats form a transition zone between river environments and ocean
environments, and ecological successions can form along the
way. Estuaries are subject to both marine influences, such as tides, waves, and
the influx of saline water; and riverine influences, such as flows of fresh
water and sediment. The inflow of both seawater and freshwater provide high
levels of nutrients in both the water column and sediment, making estuaries
productive natural habitats.
Fishes that spend time in estuaries (or
river
mouths) need to be euryhaline (tolerant to a range of salinities). Estuaries
provide an unstable environment for fish, where the salinity changes and the
waters are often muddy and turbulent. In warmer climates, estuaries have mangroves
around their edges. At times there may be only a few different fish species
present in an estuary, but seasonal migrants, including eels, salmonids, and
some forage
fish such as herrings
and sprats increase
the diversity in the estuary.
River estuaries form important staging points during the
migration of anadromous and catadromus fish species, such as salmon and eels, giving them time to
form social groups and to adjust to the changes in salinity. Salmon are
anadromous, meaning they live in the sea but ascend rivers to spawn; eels are
catadromous, living in rivers and streams, but returning to the sea to breed.
Besides the species that migrate through estuaries, there are many other fish
that use them as "nursery grounds" for spawning or as places young
fish can feed and grow before moving elsewhere. For example, herring and plaice are two
commercially important species that use the Thames Estuary for this purpose.
Mangrove swamps are associated brackish water habitats.
Many, though not all, mangrove swamps fringe estuaries and lagoons where the
salinity changes with each tide. Among the most specialised residents of
mangrove forests are mudskippers, fish that forage for food on land, and archer fish,
perch-like fish that "spit" at insects and other small animals living
in the trees, knocking them into the water where they can be eaten. Like
estuaries, mangrove swamps are important breeding grounds for many fish, with
species such as snappers, halfbeaks, and tarpon spawning or maturing among them.
Coral reef fish
Coral reefs support flourishing ecosystems, paradoxically
in clear, low nutrient waters, along tropical continental coasts and around
volcanic islands. Coral reef fish are numerous and diverse.
In tropical waters, coral reef fish live amongst or in close
relation to coral
reefs. Coral reefs form complex ecosystems
with tremendous biodiversity. Coral reef fish can be particularly
colourful and interesting to watch. Hundreds of species can exist in a small
area of a healthy reef, many of them hidden or well camouflaged. Reef fish have
developed many ingenious specialisations adapted to survival on the reefs.
Coral reefs occupy less than one percent of the surface area of the world
oceans, yet they provide a home for 25 percent of all marine fish species.
Coral reefs often depend on other habitats in the
surrounding area for the supply of nutrients, such as seagrass
meadows and mangrove forests. Seagrass and mangroves supply
dead plants and animals which are rich in nitrogen and also serve to feed fish
and animals from the reef by supplying wood and vegetation. Reefs in turn
protect mangroves and seagrass from waves and produce sediment for
the mangroves and seagrass to root in.
Anthias are members of the family Serranidae
(basses,
basslets, groupers) and
make up the subfamily Anthiinae. They are widespread in tropical waters. They
have been called the "quintessential reef fish",
and make up a sizeable portion of the colourful fishes seen swarming in
coral reef
photography. Anthias are mostly small, peaceful, beautiful and popular as ornamental
fish. They are mainly zooplankton feeders. Anthias shoal and school in large numbers, operating
more intimate "harems" within the schools. These harems contain a
dominant and colourful male, between 2 and 12 females — who operate a hierarchy
among themselves — and one or two "subdominant" males, often less
brightly coloured and non-territorial. Within the swarm of females, territorial
males perform acrobatic U-swim displays and vigorously defend an area of the
reef and its associated harem. Anthias are protogynous
hermaphrodites.
All anthias are born female; if a dominant male perishes, the largest female of
the group will often change into a male to take its place. This may lead to
squabbling between the next largest male and the transforming female, whose
hormones are now surging with testosterone. This can turn quite vicious in the
limited confines of captivity.
The foureye butterflyfish has a false eyespot on its sides, which can confuse prey and
predators.
Butterflyfish are group of about 120 species belonging
to the family Chaetodontidaeof Perchiformes. They include bannerfish
and coralfish.
They are widespread on coral reefs. Butterflyfish are mostly between 12 and 22
centimetres (4.7 and 8.7 in) in length. The largest species, the lined butterflyfish and saddle butterflyfish, grow to 30 centimetres
(12 in). Many species are brightly coloured and strikingly patterned,
though other species are dull in colour. Many have eyespots on their flanks and
dark bands across their eyes, not unlike the patterns seen on butterfly
wings. Their deep, laterally narrow bodies are easily
noticed through the profusion of reef life. The conspicuous colouration of
butterflyfish may be intended for interspecies communication. Butterflyfish
have uninterrupted dorsal fins with tail fins that may be rounded or truncated, but are
never forked. Generally diurnal and frequenting waters of less than 18 metres
(59 ft) (though some species descend to 180 metres (590 ft)),
butterflyfish stick to particular home ranges. The corallivores are
especially territorial, forming mated pairs and staking claim to a specific
coral head. Contrastingly, the zooplankton
feeders form large conspecific groups. By night butterflyfish hide in reef
crevices and exhibit markedly different colouration. Their colouration also
makes butterflyfish popular aquarium fish. However, most species feed on coral polyps and sea
anemones, which can result in problems for the hobby aquarists.
Clownfish, anemonefish
and damselfish
are among about 360 species classified in the family Pomacentridae
Most Pomacentrids are associated with
coral reefs in the Indo-West Pacific, with a few species occurring in temperate
waters. Some species are native to freshwater or brackish estuarine
environments. Most live in shallow water, from 2 to 15 meters (6 to 50 feet),
although some species are found below 100 m (330 feet). Most species are
specialists, living in specific parts of the reef, such as sandy lagoons, steep
reef slopes, or areas exposed to strong wave action. In general, the coral is
used as shelter, and many species can only survive in its presence. The
bottom-dwelling species are territorial, occupying and defending a portion of
the reef, often centred around an area of shelter. By keeping away other
species of fish, some pomacentrids encourage the growth of thick mats of algae
within their territories, leading to the common name farmerfish.
Different species display a wide range of colours, although some are relatively
drab. Pomacentrids are omnivorous or herbivorous, feeding off algae, plankton, and
small bottom-dwelling crustaceans. A small number eat coral.
The yellowfin goatfish changes its colour so it can school
with blue-striped snappers
Goatfishes are a family Mullidae of about 55 species of
perciform fishes, associated worldwide with tropical reefs.They are
typically about 20 cm long, though the dash-and-dot goatfish, grows to
55 cm.Goatfish are tireless benthic feeders, possess a pair of long chemosensory
barbels ("whiskers") protruding from
their chins resembling a goat’s beard. They use these to rifle through the
sediments in search of a meal. Like goats, they seek anything edible; worms, crustaceans, molluscs and
other small invertebrates are staples. Many species of goatfish are
conspicuously coloured and have the ability to change their colouration
depending on their current activity. By day, many form large inactive
(non-feeding) schools: these aggregates may contain both conspecifics and
heterospecifics. For example, the yellowfin goatfish school with blue-striped
snappers. When they do that, the yellowfins changes its colouration to
match that of the snapper. By night the schools disperse and individual
goatfish head their separate ways to loot the sands. The diurnal goldsaddle goatfish changes from a lemon-yellow
to a pale cream when feeding. Other nocturnal feeders will shadow the active
goatfish, waiting patiently for overlooked morsels. Goatfish stay within the
shallows, going no deeper than about 110 metres. Most species do not tolerate brackish water,
so they do not enter estuaries or the mouths of rivers.
Other nearshore fish
Kelp forests can provide shelter and food for shallow
water fish
Other nearshore or shallow water fish live near the shore in
depths of less than 10 metres. They occupy the areas over sandy or rocky
bottoms, and can be associated with seagrass
meadows and kelp forests. They can be divided into demersal
fish and pelagic fish. Demersal fish live on or near the sea
floor, while pelagic fish live in the water
column away the sea floor.
Examples of such shallow water demersal fish, found in both
tropical and temperate waters around the world, are triplefins, seahorses,
wrasse and flounder. As demersal fish, all these fish spend most of their time
on or near the sea floor.
- Flatfish are superbly adapted groundfish, found on muddy and sandy sea floors. In many species both eyes lie on one side of the head, one or the other migrating through and around the head during development. Some species face their "left" side upward, some face their "right" side upward, and others face either side upward. Some flatfish can camouflage themselves on the ocean floor.
- Wrasse are a large family of mainly small fish, usually less than 20 centimetres (7.9 in) long. Most wrasse are loners that prefer habitats such as coral reefs and rocky shores. They live close to the substrate, eating small invertebrates and almost anything else that lurks on the bottom. Many are brightly coloured. They have thick lips and use their sharp teeth to pick small creatures off the rocks. Many smaller wrasses follow the feeding trails of larger fish, picking up invertebrates disturbed by their passing.
- Triplefins are a family of fish. They are usually found around coral reefs and rocks, usually in shallow, clear sunlit waters such as lagoons and seaward reefs. Triplefins have three dorsal fins (hence the name). They are small fish, usually less than six cm long. Brightly coloured, often for reasons of camouflage, they are nervous and retreat to rock crevices at any perceived threat.
- Seahorses are a genus of fish. They prefer sheltered harbours, estuaries and other shallow coastal waters, where they hunt tiny crustaceans. They bob around in sheltered areas such as coral reefs, mangrove stands and seagrass meadows and estuaries. They are camouflaged with murky patterns that blend into kelp and sea grass backgrounds. During social moments or in unusual surroundings, seahorses can turn on bright colours.
Examples of shallow water pelagic fish, found in both
tropical and temperate waters around the world, are grey mullet, sprats and
garfish. As pelagic fish, all these fish spend most of their time living in the
water
column away the sea floor.
- The grey mullet are medium size fish, typically about 50 cm (20 in) long. They are often caught with set nets.
- The garfish is a long, slender fish, looking like a spear, which feeds on seagrass fragments, shrimps and crab larvae. In turn it is preyed on by larger fish and, since it is often near the surface, cormorants and gannets.
Grey mullet
Plankton feeding pelagic fish
Areas of upwelling in red.
At the base of food chains
are the primary producers. In the ocean these primary
producers are mainly a type of plankton, microscopic phytoplankton
which drift in the water column. Phytoplankton need sunlight for photosynthesis
to power carbon fixation, so they are mainly located in
sunlit surface waters. Phytoplankton also need and rapidly use nutrients in the
water column. The phytoplankton are eaten by zooplankton,
which in turn are eaten by predatory zooplankton. Filter
feeders then eat the plankton and larger predatory
fish eat the filter feeders (see diagram at the right).
Most filter feeding pelagic fish found in coastal waters are
small, silvery forage fish. Forage fish include fishes of the family Clupeidae (herrings, shad, sardines and pilchards, hilsa, menhaden and sprats), as well as anchovies, capelin and halfbeaks. They
use schooling strategies to avoid predators, and
different schools of forage fish often associate with each other in open
coastal waters. Forage fish feed near the base of the food chain on plankton and fry
(recently hatched fish), often by filter
feeding. In turn, they are preyed on by larger predatory fish, seabirds and marine
mammals.
Worldwide, there are five major coastal currents associated
with upwelling areas: the Canary Current (off Northwest
Africa), the Benguela Current (off southern
Africa), the California Current (off California
and Oregon), the
Humboldt
Current (off Peru
and Chile), and
the Somali
Current (off Western India). All of these currents support major
fisheries. Many forage fish are important commercial species, and the schools
can be targeted by spotter planes. The fish are caught by purse
seiners—fishing boats that use nets to enclose the fish—and can be overfished.
Underwater video loop of a school of herrings migrating to
their spawning grounds in the Baltic Sea
Predatory pelagic fish
Predatory pelagic fishes found on continental shelves
worldwide in both tropical and temperate waters include porgies, barracuda, amberjacks
and cutlassfishes.
They tend to be larger fish, and are carnivorous, feeding on the smaller,
silvery forage
fish that eat plankton (see section above). Some species also feed on crabs
and other invertebrates, foraged from the sea floor.
- Mackerel scom*
- Porgies sometimes called sea breams, are any of about 100 species belonging to the family Sparidae. Porgies usually have high backs and a single dorsal fin, like snapper or grunt fishes (grunts are named for the sound they make grinding their teeth). They are bottom feeding pelagic fishes, with small mouths equipped with strong teeth adapted for handling small fishes and invertebrates with hard shells. Most do not exceed a size of about 30 cm (12 in), but some may grow to four times that length. They often school, and will migrate between reefs. Larger fish enter estuaries and harbours.
- Barracuda have long slender bodies typically about 50 cm (20 in) long. They have a wicked set of teeth and are ferocious predators. They feed on crustaceans, cephalopods and small fish like anchovy and pilchard. Barracouta often hunt in schools near the bottom or midwater, and sometimes even near the surface at night.
The jolthead porgy is a porgi grunt
Great barracuda and jacks
The yellowtail amberjack, pound for pound, is one
of the hardest fighting fish in the ocean.
The largehead hairtail is a cutlassfish
The sand tiger shark is a large coastal shark that
inhabits coastal waters worldwide. It's numbers are declining, and it is now
listed as a vulnerable species on the IUCN
Red List.[22]
Giant trevally are great gamefish found
in Indo-Pacific
tropical waters. They are powerful apex
predators in most of their habitats, hunting both individually and in
schools.
- Cutlassfishes are a group of about 40 species belonging to the family Trichiuridae. They are ocean fish which regularly stray into coastal waters around the world. Fish of this family are long, slender, and generally steely blue or silver in colour, giving rise to their name. They have reduced or absent pelvic and caudal fins, giving them an eel-like appearance, and large fang-like teeth.
- Jacks, amberjacks, pompanos, horse mackerel, scads, leatherjackets and trevally are fish of the family Carangidae. Found in most coastal waters, they are fast predatory fishes that hunt in the waters above reefs and in the open sea; some dig in the sea floor for invertebrates (some can also filter feed, such as the white trevally). The largest fish in the family, the giant trevally, grows up to 1.7 m in length; most fish in the family reach a maximum length of 25–100 cm. The family contains many important commercial and game fish, notably the Pacific jack mackerel and the other jack mackerels in the genus Trachurus. The type species of this genus is the Atlantic horse mackerel. Jack mackerels are an important inshore commercial species.
- Amberjacks are a group of nine species belonging to the genus Seriola within the family Carangidae. Mainly open water fish, they can follow small forage fish into estuaries and enclosed waters, where they will also hunt for crustaceans. Amberjacks are fast swimming and aggressive predators that often hunt in schools around offshore reefs. the yellowtail amberjack can reach 1.8 metres in length and weigh 60 kilograms.
Demersal fish
Cod-like fishes, like this morid cod
have a barbel (fleshy filament) on their lower jaw which
they use to detect prey buried in the sand or mud.
See also: demersal
fish
Fish that live on or in close association with the sea floor
are called demersal fish. This section discusses the coastal
demersal fish that live on the continental shelf, but are living further from
the coast and in deeper water than the nearshore fish discussed above.
Demersal fish are white fish. Unlike oily fish,
white fish contain oils only in their liver, rather than in
the gut, and can therefore be gutted as soon as they are
caught, on board the ship. White fish has dry and white flesh. They can be
divided into benthopelagic fish (mostly "round"
fish) which live near the sea bed, such as cod, and benthic
fish (flatfish)
such as plaice
which live on the sea bed. Benthic fish tend to be "flat", so
they can lie on the bottom.
- Cod-like fishes are a number of round benthopelagic species belonging to the order Gadiformes, such as Atlantic and Pacific cod, morid cod, haddock and pollock, including the highly commercial Alaska pollock. Cod-like fishes are often found in large schools over sandy or muddy bottoms. They have a barbel (fleshy filament) on their lower jaw which they use to detect prey buried in the sand or mud. Some migrate to warm water in winter to spawn.
- John dory are fishes of the genus Zeus. They have a widespread distribution and are typically found near the seabed in depths from 5 meters (15 ft). The John dory grows to a maximum length of 65 cm (2 ft). Although it is a benthopelagic fish, its body is flat and it can hardly be seen from the front because it is so thin. It is a poor swimmer with long spines on the dorsal fin. It has a large dark eyespot on the side of its body which is used to confuse prey, which are scooped up in its big mouth.[23] Large eyes at the front of the head provide it with bifocal vision and depth perception, which are important for predators. The John Dory usually gets its food by stalking it then shooting out a tube in its mouth to capture its prey. It eats forage fish, and occasionally squid and cuttlefish. In turn, they are preyed on by sharks, like the dusky shark, and other large bony fish. They are normally solitary.
- Turbot and brill are benthic flatfish, resembling flounder and sole, but found in deeper offshore waters on the continental shelf. They are brownish-green, with dark blotches on the turbot and mottling on the brill. They are fished by coastal trawlers.
The polar cod is found further north than any other fish
species. It frequents river mouths and feeds on plankton and krill. It is preyed
on by narwhals,
belugas,
ringed
seals and seabirds.
The John dory is so thin it can hardly be seen from the
front. The large eyespot on the side of its body confuses its prey.
The turbot is a large left-eyed flatfish
usually found not too far from shore in sandy shallow waters. It is a prized food fish.
The red gurnard is a mail-cheeked
fish found to depths of around 180 metres. They often grunt when captured as
air is expelled from its air bladder.
- Mail-cheeked fishes belong to a group of about 30 species in the order Scorpaeniformes. Mail-cheeked fishes are named after a plate of bone that runs across each cheek. They are widespread in all the oceans of the world. Mail-cheeked fishes are carnivorous, mostly feeding on crustaceans, such as crabs and shrimp, and on smaller fish. Most species live on the sea bottom in relatively shallow waters, although species are known from mid and deep water, from the mid-water, and even from fresh water. They typically have spiny heads, and rounded pectoral and caudal fins. Most species are less than 30 centimetres (12 in) in length, but the full size range of the order varies from the velvetfishes, which can be just 2 centimetres (0.79 in) long as adults, to the Lingcod, which can reach 150 centimetres (4.9 ft) in length.
- Red gurnard are mail-cheeked fish. They use their large pectoral fins to rest on the bottom and to detect food.
The stargazer is an ambush
predator which can deliver both venom and electric shocks. It has been
called "the meanest thing in creation".
Stargazers are about 50 species of fishes, belonging to
the family Uranoscopidae, and found worldwide in shallow waters. Stargazers are
venomous;
they have two large poison
spines situated behind the opercle and above the pectoral
fins. They can also deliver electric
shocks. They are ambush predators with eyes on top of their heads
(thus the name). Stargazers also have a large upward-facing mouth in a large
head. They bury themselves in sand with only their eyes showing, and leap
upwards to ambush fish and invertebrates overhead. Some species have a
worm-shaped lure growing out of the floor of the mouth, which they wiggle to
attract prey's attention. Lengths range from 18 cm up to
90 cm, for the giant stargazer Kathetostoma giganteum.
Stargazers are a delicacy in some cultures. The venom is destroyed when it is
cooked, and stargazers are sold in some fish
markets with their electric organ removed. They have been called "the
meanest things in creation" and the "worst pet on earth".
- Sandperches are a family, Pinguipedidae, containing 63 species of fishes in the order Perciformes. They are benthic carnivoures, feeding on small fish and invertebrates. Examples are the redbanded weever, yellow weaver and blue cod. They are often caught in pots like crayfish.
- Medusa fishes are a family Centrolophidae of 31 species of perciform fishes. They are found in temperate and tropical waters throughout the world, usually feeding on fish, crustaceans and small squid near rough sea floors on continental shelf and slope. Examples are barrelfish, southern driftfish, imperial blackfish, the Japanese and pelagic butterfish, the New Zealand and Tasmanian ruffe, and the common, silver and white warehou. The young of some species associate with jellyfish, which provides them with protection from predators and opportunities to scavenge the remains of the jellyfish's meals. The young of other species associate with large masses of floating kelp.
A speckled sand perch perched on coral sand
The rudderfish is a medusa fish
Atlantic wreckfish inhabit caves and wrecks.
They are good game fish, reaching a maximum reported length of 210 cm
(7 ft) and weight of 100 kg (220 lb).
- Grouper are fish belonging to a number of genera in the subfamily Epinephelinae of the family Serranidae, in the order Perciformes. Species of grouper include the black, comet, gag, giant, Goliath, Nassau, saddletail, tiger, Warsaw, white and yellowfin grouper. Typical lengths are 80–120 centimetres. They inhabit depths from reefs near the surface down to over 400 metres. They feed on just about any moving animal they encounter. Groper are important inshore commercial fish, usually caught with gill nets (in earlier times longlines were used).
- Wreckfish are a family Polyprionidae of perciform fishes, found on the floor of the continental shelf and slope where they inhabit caves and shipwrecks (thus their common name). The Atlantic wreckfish is at depths between 40 and 600 m (130 to 2,000 ft). They are largely a solitary fish, though juveniles school below floating objects. Their diet includes large ocean cephalopods, crustaceans, and other bottom-dwelling fishes.
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