Epinephelus macrospilos (Bleeker, 1855) is a animal in the Serranidae family, order Perciformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Epinephelus macrospilos (Bleeker, 1855) (Epinephelus macrospilos (Bleeker, 1855))
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Epinephelus macrospilos (Bleeker, 1855)

Epinephelus macrospilos (Bleeker, 1855)

The snub-nose grouper Epinephelus macrospilos is an Indo-Pacific ray-finned grouper that feeds on fish, crustaceans, and cephalopods.

Family
Genus
Epinephelus
Order
Perciformes
Class

About Epinephelus macrospilos (Bleeker, 1855)

Epinephelus macrospilos, commonly called the snub-nose grouper, is a species of ray-finned grouper fish. It belongs to the subfamily Epinephelinae, which is part of the family Serranidae — a family that also includes anthias and sea basses. This species is distributed across the Indo-Pacific region, ranging from the east coast of Africa to the central Pacific. It lives in lagoons and seaweed reefs, found at depths down to 44 m. Its diet consists of crustaceans, fishes, and some cephalopods. The maximum recorded size of E. macrospilos is 43 cm in length, and it can weigh up to 2 kg.

Photo: (c) François Libert, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by François Libert · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Perciformes Serranidae Epinephelus

More from Serranidae

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

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