About Mycteroperca tigris (Valenciennes, 1833)
The tiger grouper, Mycteroperca tigris, has an elongate, robust, compressed body. Its body depth at the origin of the dorsal fin is no greater than its depth at the origin of the anal fin, and the species has a large mouth. The standard length of this fish is between 3.1 and 3.6 times its body depth. Its preopercle is rounded, with no lobe at its angle. The dorsal fin holds 11 spines and 15 to 17 soft rays, while the anal fin holds 3 spines and 11 soft rays. The membranes between the dorsal fin spines are distinctly notched. The caudal fin is straight in juvenile tiger groupers and slightly concave in adults. The upper body of adults is dark, marked with 9 to 11 thin, pale oblique lines. This species can change its colour dramatically, and can lighten or darken its overall colour; it can occasionally appear bright red, particularly when it is being attended to by cleaner fish. Juvenile tiger groupers are yellow, with a dusky line running along their flanks. This species reaches a maximum total length of 101 centimetres (40 in), though individuals are commonly around 40 centimetres (16 in); the maximum published weight for the species is 10 kilograms (22 lb). Tiger grouper is distributed in the western Atlantic Ocean. Its range extends in the north from southeastern Florida, Bermuda, the Bahamas, and the Flower Garden Banks, south through the Caribbean Sea to the Maroni River in French Guiana. There is a separate disjunct population in Brazil, found from Ceara State to Rio de Janeiro State. This is a solitary species that lives on coral reefs and in rocky areas. It is an ambush predator that hunts smaller fishes, and hides among coral and sponges, attempting to stay concealed even when approached. It visits the cleaning stations of cleaner fish. The size distribution and sex ratio of the population around Bermuda suggests that tiger groupers are protogynous hermaphrodites: all individuals with a total length less than 37 centimetres (15 in) are female, and all individuals with a total length greater than 45 centimetres (18 in) are male. Tiger groupers occur at depths ranging from 3 to 112 metres (9.8 to 367.5 ft). They are known to form spawning aggregations in the northern part of their range, though no such aggregations have been recorded off the coast of Brazil.