Abalistes stellatus explained

Abalistes stellatus, the starry triggerfish or flat-tailed triggerfish, is a species of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the family Balistidae, the triggerfishes. This triggerfish has a wide Indo-Pacific distribution.

Taxonomy

Abalistes stellatus was first formally described in 1798 by an anomymous author, the description being published in Allgemeine Literatur-Zeitung and is the author thought to be Bernard Germain de Lacépède based on a description he found in a manuscript written by Philibert Commerson. The type locality was given as Mauritius. In 1839 William John Swainson created a subgenus of Capriscus he called Leiurus but he had already preoccupied this name with a subgenus of sticklebacks and in 1906 David Starr Jordan and Alvin Seale replaced Leiurus with Abalistes, making Capriscus (Leiurus) macropthalmus as its type species by replacement. This species belongs to the family Blaistidae, which is included in the suborder Balistoidei.[1]

Etymology

Abalistes stellatus is the type species of the genus Abalistes, a name which prefixes a-, meaning "not", with Balistes, the genus that A. stellaris, a synonym of A. stellatus, was considered to belong to. The specific name, stellatus, means "starry", a reference to the small white spots on the upper body.[2]

Description

Abalistes stellatus has 3 spines and between 25 and 27 soft rays in its dorsal fin while the anal fin has 24 or 24 soft rays. There is an oblique groove in front of the eye and the scales to the rear of the gill slit are large. The depth of the body fits into the standard length between 2 and 2.5 times. The caudal peduncle is flattened and is at least as wide as it is deep, as well as being narrow and tapering with a lenth much greater than its depth. The caudal fin is double emarginate and the two lobes lengthen as the fish grows.[3] The large scales behind the gill slit and above the base of the pectoral fin create a flexible tympanum. The scales towards the rear of the body are keeled, creating longitudinal ridges. The overall colour is greyish to greenish-brown fading to whitish ventrally, there are four large white blotches along the back, the last of these is located on the caudal peduncle and the body is marked with pale yellowish-brown spots and there may be a white streak on the middle of the upper side.[3] This species has a maximum published total length of, although is more typical.

Distribution and habitat

Abalistes stellatus has a wide distribution in the Indian and Western Pacific Oceans. It occurs along the coast of eastern Africa from the Red Sea to Mossel Bay in the Western Cape, South Africa,[4] across the Indian Ocean and into the Western Pacific Ocean as far east as Fiji, north as far as southern Japan and south to northern and eastern Australia. It is found at deptsh between in areas of sand, sponge, and seaweed areas over deep slopes. The juveniles frequently inhabit sheltered coastal bays and estuaries where there are open areas scattered with outcrops of rubble and other debris.[3]

Biology

Abalistes setllatus feeds on benthic invertebrates and its diet includes crabs, molluscs and sea urchins. The starry triggerfish is typically solitary but the males and females come together to form pairs for breeding. The eggs are laid on the substrate and are gaurded by the female.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes Classification . 16 October 2024 . Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes . California Academy of Sciences.
  2. Web site: Order TETRAODONTIFORMES: Families MOLIDAE, BALISTIDAE, MONACANTHIDAE, ARACANIDAE and OSTRACIIDAE . 21 August 2024 . 16 October 2024 . Christopher Scharpf . Christopher Scharpf.
  3. Web site: Bray, D.J. . 2018 . Abalistes stellatus . Fishes of Australia . 17 October 2024 . Museums Victoria.
  4. Book: Keiichi Matsuura . Tetraodontiformes . . Elaine Heemstra . David E. Ebert . Wouter Holleman . . 2022 . Coastal Fishes of the Western Indian Ocean . 406–485 .
  5. Web site: Starry Triggerfish Abalistes stellatus . 4 June 2018 . 17 October 2024 . Western Australian Museum.