Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Lethrinus microdon

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Actinopterygii

Family
  
Lethrinidae

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Chordata

Order
  
Perciformes

Genus
  
Lethrinus

Lethrinus microdon httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Lethrinus olivaceus, Lethrinus xanthochilus, Lethrinus, Lethrinus variegatus, Lethrinus obsoletus

Smalltooth emperors pack hunting lethrinus microdon gopro video


Lethrinus microdon is a species of emperor fish. It is a marine fish, bluish-grey or brown in colour with pale or somewhat orange fins. This species is reef-associated and is often found in small schools, occasionally with Lethrinus olivaceus at depths of 10 to 80 metres. It is widespread in the Indo-West Pacific and other waters. This species is caught commercially and is considered to be an excellent food fish.

Contents

Common names

Common names include the following, or variants thereof:

  • Smalltooth emperor
  • Longface emperor
  • Longnosed emperor
  • Pigface bream
  • Description

    This species is bluish-grey or brown in colour with pale or somewhat orange fins, and has a moderately long snout. It commonly has dark, scattered, irregular blotches on its sides. Some specimens have three streaks of dark colouration radiating away from the eye toward the snout. It is a relatively elongate fish and grows to a maximum length of approximately 70 cm, but is commonly recorded at between 30 to 50 cm in length.

    Distribution

    Lethrinus microdon is a widespread species. It has been recorded in the Red Sea, Persian Gulf, Arabian Sea, from East Africa to Sri Lanka, in the Ryukyu Islands as well as Papua New Guinea.

    Habitat

    This fish is non-migratory and is found over sandy bottoms near reefs. It forms small schools, occasionally with Lethrinus olivaceus, and has a maximum depth range of approximately 10 to 80 metres.

    Diet

    Lethrinus microdon feeds in the day and at night, and is known to feed mainly on other fishes, cephalopods, crustaceans, and polychaetes.

    Human uses

    This species is fished commercially and is considered to be an excellent food fish. It is usually marketed fresh and not frozen. It is known to be caught using gill nets, trawls, handlines, and fish traps.

    References

    Lethrinus microdon Wikipedia