Belonoperca chabanaudi Fowler & Bean, 1930 is a animal in the Serranidae family, order Perciformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Belonoperca chabanaudi Fowler & Bean, 1930 (Belonoperca chabanaudi Fowler & Bean, 1930)
🦋 Animalia

Belonoperca chabanaudi Fowler & Bean, 1930

Belonoperca chabanaudi Fowler & Bean, 1930

Belonoperca chabanaudi is an elongated predatory toxic fish in the genus Belonoperca, distinguished by specific fin spine and ray counts.

Family
Genus
Belonoperca
Order
Perciformes
Class

About Belonoperca chabanaudi Fowler & Bean, 1930

Belonoperca chabanaudi is a fish species first described by Fowler & Bean in 1930, belonging to the genus Belonoperca. Fish in the Belonoperca genus are elongated predatory fish that produce the toxin grammistin within the mucus of their skin. There are two species in this genus; both typically have 9 spines in their dorsal fin, though Belonoperca chabanaudi may occasionally have 10 dorsal spines. Both species also have 10 dorsal fin rays. All other members of the tribe Diploprionini have more dorsal fin rays than species in the Belonoperca genus. Belonoperca species also differ from their related fish in the arrangement of spines and rays in their anal fin.

Photo: (c) Shigeru Harazaki, all rights reserved, uploaded by Shigeru Harazaki

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Perciformes Serranidae Belonoperca

More from Serranidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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