Antigonia rubescens
FAMILY
Caproidae
TAXONOMY
Antigonia rubescens Gьnther, 1860, Japan.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Pink boarfish.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Attains a total length (including the tail fin) of about 6 in (15
cm). The head and body are deep, greatly compressed, and
shaped like a disk or diamond; the body depth is more than
twice the head length. The dorsal head profile and the predorsal
region are concave, and there is a bulge on the nape. The
body, cheeks, and operculum are covered with small ctenoid
scales. The mouth is small, and the upper jaw is shorter than
the eye diameter. The dorsal fin has nine spines and 27–30 soft
rays; the anal fin has three spines and 24–28 rays. The tail fin
has 10 branched rays. The body is pale reddish silvery, with a
dark red bar from the dorsal fin origin to the origin of the anal
fin; another red bar lies above and below the eye, and there is
a red band on the body at the rear of dorsal and anal fin bases.
The abdomen and lower rear part of the head are silvery
white.
DISTRIBUTION
Japan, Midway Island northwest of Hawaii, Taiwan, Philippines,
China, and Australia.
HABITAT
Adults are usually caught with trawls near the bottom at depths
of 333–3,000 ft (100–900 m).
BEHAVIOR
The
BEHAVIOR
of the red boarfish is poorly known, because it
lives too deep to be observed easily. They occur in large aggregations,
as many individuals may be caught in a single trawl
haul.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
No information has been published on the diet of the red
boarfish. Probably feeds on plankton and small benthic invertebrates.
Subject to predation by various piscivores that inhabit
the outer shelf and slope region (e.g., sharks, lancetfishes, and
gempylids).
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Poorly known. Probably a broadcast spawner, with pelagic eggs
and larvae.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not listed by IUCN.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
None known.
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