Cephalopholis argus
Cephalopholis argus | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Actinopterygii |
Order: | Perciformes |
Family: | Serranidae |
Genus: | Cephalopholis |
Species: | C. argus |
Binomial name | |
Cephalopholis argus (Bloch and Schneider, 1801) | |
Cephalopholis argus, also known as: roi, bluespotted grouper, argus grouper, peacock hind, peacock grouper or peacock rockcod is a fish from the Indo-Pacific which is variously a commercial gamefish, an invasive species and occasionally an aquarium resident. Its species name comes from its resemblance to the "hundred staring eyes" of the monster Argus in Greek mythology.
Description
A medium-sized fish that can reach a length of 60 centimeters (24 in). Small individuals are dark brown with hundreds of small, dark-edged iridescent blue spots. Larger specimens sometimes develop four to six lighter vertical bars on the back half of its body.[1]
Behavior
Roi typically sit on a coral head, retreating when startled.[1]
Red Sea males defend harems of 2-6 females in territories ranging up to .5 acres (0.20 ha). Each female defends part of the territory from the other females. The male visits each female daily, raising his dorsal fin to signal his approach. The females emerges from hiding, erecting her own dorsal fin and changing to a lighter color. They swim together, rubbing flanks before he departs until the next day.[1]
Territorial disputes may involve "color fights" in which two males positioning themselves at right angles to each other. They then darken their color and repeatedly switch their bars from dark to light. The loser becomes pale and retreats. If the color fight ends in a draw, the two males may attack each other.[1]
Reproduction
In Micronesia, spawning usually occurs territorially at dusk. During courtship, both sexes darken except for a white keyhole-shaped patch at the center of the body.[1]
Ecology
Feeding
Hunting, they lie on the bottom and surge forward, preferring juvenile surgeonfish and crustaceans. Alternatively they may hover motionless in the water column before attacking.[1]
This grouper may follow and cooperate with another predator species, such as an octopus or eel or camouflage themselves in a school of surgeonfish. Multiple individuals may cooperate to harass an eel to get it to flush prey for them.[1]
In the Red Sea, they hunt in the morning and evening.[1]
In the aquarium
Cephalopholis argus is a hardy aquarium fish for those who have a large marine aquarium. Its large size combined with its aggressive nature means it is best housed either alone or with other large aggressive fish such as lionfish, and moray eels. As a predator it will eat any smaller aquarium inhabitants such as damselfish.
In Hawaii
Known in Hawaii as Roi, the state introduced them in the 1950s to enhance local fisheries. Hawaii’s Division of Aquatic Resources (DAR) finds that roi have become the reefs' dominant predator. The roi population there has increased 15 fold since the 1980s.[2]
These predators threaten native reef fish such as parrotfish and goatfish. A University of Hawaii study estimated that in a three-square-mile area off the Kona Coast of Hawaii Island, roi eat 90 tonnes (89 long tons; 99 short tons) of reef fish annually— equivalent to 8.2 million fish.[2]
Ciguatera
Prized as delicious eating in other Pacific regions, in Hawaii’s waters roi may contain the ciguatera toxin, which builds up in humans and causes serious illness.[2]
Roundups
On Maui spearfishers participate in "Roi Roundup" tournaments that target these problematic fish, attempting to reduce their numbers and impact.[2]
Common Name
Peacock hind
Habitat
Salt water
Dispersion
The gulf of Thailand and Andaman Sea
Utilization
- Fishery : Trade
- Game: Angling
- Aquarium : Trade
Footnotes
References
- Blue Spotted Grouper Species Profile :: AquariumDomain
- animal-world.com Page on blue-spotted grouper
- fishbase Page on Cephalopholis argus
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