Fish Bits
Photos, visitors, weird and wonderful specimens, news from the field.
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Mark McGrouther
Collection Manager, Ichthyology
Amanda Hay
Technical Officer, Ichthyology
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Fish Bits
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Feb 2012
- 'Water squirting' Common Lionfish
- This week in fish: Warty Anglerfish
- This week in Fish: Incredible Barreleye and a huge shark tooth
- Incredible Barreleye video
- This week in Fish: Shark beaching and Cobbler Wobbegong
- The Power of X-rays
- Southern Garfish, Hyporhamphus melanochir
- This week in Fish: First specimen of Denise's Pygmy Seahorse
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Jun 2011
- This week in Fish: Pacific Leaping Blenny
- Spikefin Goby, Discordipinna griessingeri
- Huge Oarfish in the shallows
- Dusky Whaler juveniles in Sydney 2011
- This week in Fish: Moorish Idols and sponge eaters
- Which fishes eat sponges?
- This week in Fish: Back to reality
- Kermadec wrap-up
- This week in Fish: Baby Batfish
- May 2011
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Apr 2011
- This week in Fish: Pineapplefish and Surf Sardine
- Dolphins at Manly
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- Whale Shark in Botany Bay - April 2011
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- This week in Fish: undescribed anglerfish and bellowsfish
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Oct 2010
- This week in Fish: Scalloped Hammerhead
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- Grow a backbone!
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- A fish that suckles its young
- This week in Fish: Baby shark cannibals
- What's in a name?
- BBC Life - Weedy Seadragon footage
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Sep 2010
- This week in Fish: Eel with a 'fishing rod tongue'
- This week in Fish: Candiru and Slingjaw Wrasse
- Slingjaw Wrasse feeding
- Humphead Maori Wrasse - up close and personal
- Candiru - careful where you go...
- This week in Fish: Deepsea anglerfishes and the Lilac-tip Basslet
- Psychedelic frogfish makes a splash
- This week in Fish: Shrek Fish, Frill and Megamouth Sharks
- Asian Sheepshead Wrasse
- Oct 2011
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Aug 2010
- Frill Shark in Japan
- Megamouth Shark movie
- This week in Fish: Fantastic fish feeding footage
- Fantastic fish feeding footage
- This week in Fish: BBC Life and Banggai Cardinalfish
- BBC Life - Convict Fish footage
- BBC Life - Flyingfish footage
- BBC Life - Sailfish feeding
- Swimming with a Whale Shark
- White Sharks aren't mindless killers
- Fangtooth feeding
- Sandtiger Shark Ultrasound
- This week in Fish: Spitting archerfish and 14 movies
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- More news from Pelagos
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- This week in Fish: Old content becomes new
- Jul 2010
- Jun 2010
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- Mar 2010
Dangerous times for Stripey Snappers
Finding a home on the reef can be a lethal time for baby fishes.
The fish
Like many reef fishes, young Stripey Snapper spend the first 4 weeks of their existence in the open ocean. In an attempt to find a reef to call home (a process called settlement), they have to brave a lethal wall of predatory mouths, that is, hungry adult reef fishes. Needless to say life as a baby fish is precarious.
The paper
In their recent fact-packed paper Australian Museum scientists Gaëlle Quéré and Jeff Leis discovered that the young Stripey Snapper - less than 2 cm long - show a surprisingly rich array of behavioural strategies aimed at improving their chances of survival.
Results
Of the 41 observed larvae, 76% reached the reef, 59% settled on the reef and 7% were eaten. The bottom type on which they settled varied, with over half (59%) settled on corals, 29% settled on topographic reef features and only 13% on rubble.
About half of the settling fish interacted with other fishes already established on the reef. These including predatory attacks and aggressive approaches by residents and aggressive approaches by the settling Stripey Snapper larvae toward other small fish on the reef.
Interestingly, fish swam at different speeds on the windward (28 cm/s) and lee (16 cm/s) sides of the island. They mostly swam in a northerly direction on the lee side of the island but mostly in a southern direction on the windward side. They avoided the surface, spending most time at depths of 2 m to 15 m.
How they did it
Ok, so how did Gaëlle (now doing postgraduate study in Germany) and Jeff gather the data in their fascinating paper? The answer is a huge amount of hard work and some potentially scary diving in 'blue water'.
Larvae were caught overnight in light traps then released by divers during the day. One diver would follow the released larva at a 'discreet' distance, while a second diver recorded distance, depth and direction every 30 seconds. From 1995 to 2004, teams of divers (including the Australian Museum's own Brooke Carson-Ewart and Amanda Hay) led by Jeff spent hundreds of hours catching and following the larvae of many fish species.
What does it all mean?
Firstly it means that their behaviour is complex, and that these tiny larvae have considerable control over where they disperse and where they settle. It also means that managers of marine parks and fisheries need to take what happens to the larvae into consideration, as just looking after the adult fish does not guarantee their future.
Reference:
Quéré, G. & Leis, J.M., 2010. Settlement behaviour of larvae of the Stripey Snapper, Lutjanus carponotatus (Teleostei: Lutjanidae) Environmental Biology of Fishes 88: 227-238.
Mark McGrouther
, Collection Manager, Ichthyology
Amanda Hay
, Technical Officer, Ichthyology
Last Updated:
Tags fishes, ichthyology, Stripey Snapper, Lutjanus carponotatus, Lutjanidae,
Larval following View full size
Kun-Ping Kan
© Kun-Ping Kan
Stripey Snapper - Settlement stage View full size
Amanda Hay
© Australian Museum
Adult Stripey Snapper View full size
Jay Cossey
© University of Guelph
Jeff Leis at Lizard Island View full size
Suzanne Bullock
© Suzanne Bullock
Central Coast, New South Wales - Small Fishes View full size
Sally Reader
© Australian Museum