Selar boops (Cuvier, 1833) is a animal in the Carangidae family, order Perciformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Selar boops (Cuvier, 1833) (Selar boops (Cuvier, 1833))
🦋 Animalia

Selar boops (Cuvier, 1833)

Selar boops (Cuvier, 1833)

Selar boops is a marine schooling fish with a large eye that is commercially fished across the Indo-Pacific.

Family
Genus
Selar
Order
Perciformes
Class

About Selar boops (Cuvier, 1833)

Adults of Selar boops typically reach a maximum length of 22 centimetres (8.7 in), but can grow up to 25 centimetres (9.8 in), with a recorded maximum total length of 26 centimetres (10 in). This species has 9 dorsal spines, 23 to 25 soft dorsal rays, 3 anal spines, and 19 to 21 soft anal rays. The fish is silvery blue in color, with a horizontal yellow line running along its midsection. It has a notably large eye that makes up approximately one-third of its head; this feature gives the species its specific epithet boops, which combines the words for "ox" and "eye" from Greek. In the Indian Ocean, Selar boops ranges from Sri Lanka and eastern India to the Andaman Sea, Southeast Asia, and northwestern Australia. Additional populations are found in the Pacific Ocean around Southeast Asia, northern Australia, multiple Pacific islands, and Central America. Selar boops is most often found over seagrass beds and other soft substrates, though it also occurs on coral and rocky reefs. It lives at depths ranging from 35 to 500 metres (115 to 1,640 ft). This species forms large schools during the day; these schools break up at night, when individuals feed on crabs, shrimp, and small fish caught either from the water column or the seabed. Its eggs are pelagic. Selar boops is a commercially important species targeted by fisheries in some regions of its range. In Indonesia, it is caught using a variety of fishing gear including purse seines, gill nets, lift nets, handlines, and beach seines.

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

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Perciformes Carangidae Selar

More from Carangidae

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

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