Parapterois heterura

Parapterois heterura, the blackfoot firefish, is a species of scorpionfish widely distributed on the southeastern coast of Africa as well as off Japan and in Indonesia where it is usually found in sheltered coastal bays with a soft bottom, such as fine sand or mud. It is found in depths ranging from 40 to 300 metres (130 to 980 ft). This species is a sedentary fish and may even bury itself within the substrate. P. heterura flashes its brightly colored pectoral fins to startle predators and escape, but it may also use these fins to corner prey. This behavior has been demonstrated in other lionfish. This species can be found in the aquarium trade.[4]

Parapterois heterura

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Scorpaeniformes
Family: Scorpaenidae
Genus: Parapterois
Species:
P. heterura
Binomial name
Parapterois heterura
(Bleeker, 1856) [2]
Synonyms

Synonyms as per Motomura[3] & Fishbase[4]
Ebosia pavo Schmidt 1931
Ebosia starksi Franz, 1910
Parapterois heterurus (Bleeker, 1856)
Pterois heterurus Bleeker, 1856
Pterois jordani Regan, 1905
Pterois natalensis von Bonde, 1923
Pterois nigripinnis Gilchrist, 1904
Pterois tanabensis Tanaka 1918

Description

Parapterois heterura grows to a maximum length of 38 cm (15 in) TL,[4] however, most specimens are much smaller than this and adults are often about 11 cm (4.3 in) in length.[3] The dorsal fin of this fish has thirteen spines with long filaments on their tips, and nine soft rays. The anal fins have two spines and seven to eight soft rays. The outer rays of the caudal fin also have filamentous extensions.[4]

Parapterois heterura is very similar in appearance to the closely related Parapterois macrura. The two species differ in that P. heterura has scales in a pit between the posterior nostrils while P. macrura does not (except for a population of P. heterura found off the coasts of West India, South Africa, and Mozambique, which may be a different species).[3] These species do not differ much in fin spine, fin ray, gill raker counts, and most body proportions. Their differences lie in a small difference in head proportions.[3] Also, in adults, the upper margin of the eye of P. heterura is below the base of the first dorsal fin spine, while it is above in P. macrura (this trait is not consistent in juveniles, in which the eye margin may be below in both species).[3]

Distribution

This fish seems to have two separate ranges. One is on the coast of Natal in southeastern Africa and the other is in the central Indo-Pacific covering Japan, Indonesia, New Guinea and Australia.[4]

Behavior

Parapterois heterura is largely nocturnal and may partially bury itself in the substrate during the day making it difficult to spot. The brightly colored pectoral fins are flared if the fish is disturbed and may startle predators but their main purpose seems to be to help corner prey when hunting. This fish feeds on small fish and bottom-dwelling invertebrates.[4]

gollark: Ah. WinDOS.
gollark: Ah, so sort of a KVM switch as weird proprietary software.
gollark: What is this ”share mouse "?
gollark: Well, you'd be limited by HDD IO anyway.
gollark: … wait, it would, I'm really used to my all-flash setup.

References

  1. Motomura, H., Matsuura, K. & Khan, M. 2018. Parapterois heterura . The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018: e.T114177614A115022647. http://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T114177614A115022647.en. Downloaded on 14 December 2019.
  2. Bailly, Nicolas (2013). "Parapterois heterura (Bleeker, 1856)". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2013-12-21.
  3. Motomura, Hiroyuki (2004). "Morphological Comparison of a Poorly Known Scorpionfish, Parapterois macrura, with a Related Species, P. heterura (Scorpaenidae: Pteroinae)" (PDF). Zoological Studies. 43: 1–7.
  4. Froese, Rainer and Pauly, Daniel, eds. (2012). "Parapterois heterura" in FishBase. December 2012 version.
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