Sebastes mystinus (Jordan & Gilbert, 1881) is a animal in the Sebastidae family, order Scorpaeniformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Sebastes mystinus (Jordan & Gilbert, 1881) (Sebastes mystinus (Jordan & Gilbert, 1881))
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Sebastes mystinus (Jordan & Gilbert, 1881)

Sebastes mystinus (Jordan & Gilbert, 1881)

Sebastes mystinus, the blue rockfish, is a Sebastes species found off the Pacific coast of North America that feeds on plankton and small prey.

Family
Genus
Sebastes
Order
Scorpaeniformes
Class

About Sebastes mystinus (Jordan & Gilbert, 1881)

Blue rockfish (Sebastes mystinus) have a relatively smooth, oval-shaped body compared to other species in the Sebastes genus, with very few spines on their head. Their color ranges from bluish black to gray, with darker mottled patterns, including a pair of stripes that angle down and backward from each eye. They have small terminal mouths for rockfish. Their maximum length reaches 55 to 60 cm, and maximum weight reaches 3.8 kg. Blue rockfish are distributed from northern Baja California to central Oregon. Earlier records of this species being found further north are incorrect, as those individuals were actually deacon rockfish (S. diaconus), which was confirmed as a separate species through genetic analysis in 2009 and formal scientific description in 2015. Although blue rockfish have been caught at depths of over 500 meters, most individuals live in habitats from near the surface down to 90 meters. Blue rockfish are adapted to diurnal hunting of small, transparent plankton. Juvenile blue rockfish eat tiny crustaceans like copepods and barnacle larvae, and in some cases their feeding has a significant effect on these prey populations. Adult blue rockfish switch to feeding on larger prey, including free-swimming tunicates, jellyfish, gastropods, squids, young rockfish, and drifting plant fragments.

Photo: (c) NOAA Photo Library, some rights reserved (CC BY) · cc-by

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Scorpaeniformes Sebastidae Sebastes

More from Sebastidae

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

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