Caribbean Tropical Fish 4-04-10 Four-eyed Fish, Anableps Trinidad November 2009 Photo by Eliana Ardila Anableps skim the surface and their eyes see above and below. Queen Angelfish French Angelfish Gray Angelfish Rock Beauty Barracuda Jack the Ripper, the five foot welcome committee at Blue Hole. Jack the Ripper under our boat at Blue Hole. Revenge! Dinner! Mallory Blakeslee and her ‘Cudda 2005 Mike Joines & his ‘Cuddas By Harold Baquet Blackcap Basslet Fairy Basslet Batfish, a species we see while snorkeling in the mangroves of Turneffe Atoll. Spotted Burrfish Web Burrfish Spiney Puffer from Natural History Magazine A spiney little ball. from Natural History Magazine How do they puff up? It’s the stomach. From Natural History Magazine Bandtail Puffer Toadfish Scorpionfish, with poison glands, cryptically resting in Tobago. Banded Butterflyfish Foureyed Butterflyfish Spotfin Butterflyfish Cyanae Blue Chromis Brown Chromis Coney: yellow phase (l) & bicolor phase (r) Chub Chub under the boat at The Aquarium, a favorite dive site on Long Caye, Belize. Barjack Melissa Kaintz (02) with an edible barjack. Jack Crevelle Horse-eye Jack – note the large eye King Mackerel – called a King Fish in Belize. Patty Richards (02) with her King Fish. We’ll have a good meal soon! Spanish Mackerel Wahoo are another relative of the King Fish. Fish have a lateral line for sensing the environment, and the shape of the line is often used to identify fish. Yellowfin Tuna, one of the fastest fishes in the sea. Fast moving fish (a King Mackerel in this case) often have very red, highly vascularized tissue near the center of the body. High Speed Tails Gill Rakers in Bonita Bicolor Damselfish adult Bicolor Damselfish juvenile Cocoa Damselfish Flameback Ocellate Damselfish Sunshine fish on the wall Threespotted Damselfish Yellowtail Damselfish Pinfish Flounder Slippery Dick adult Slippery Dick subadult Jackknife fish Spotted Drum Drum Orangespotted Filefish Slender Filefish Spotted Goatfish Yellow Goatfish Sailfin Blenny Blennies Wrasse Blenny Jawfish with eggs in the mouth. These are common at our dive sites. Small goby on a coral – look closely when diving. Neon Goby Sarcastic Fringehead (Goby) Blue-spot Goby Yellowprow Goby looking out of a sponge. Bluestripe Grunt – note the parallel blue stripes. Bluestriped Grunt (Kissing?) French Grunt – note the oblique stripes on the sides. What do you see? (Wildlife Conservation June 2004) Yellow Grunt Blue Hamlet Indigo Hamlet Lizardfish Sand diver – closely related to the lizardfish. Gafftopsail Catfish Tarpon are one of the most popular game fishes in the world. They have huge scales that are shed continually. Ladyfish – held by a headless hippy. Scad Bonefish How to catch a Bonefish Happiness with a Bonefish Goldentail Moray Green Moray Spotted Moray More Morays (What do you think they are talking about?) “You get the leg, I’ll go for the crotch!” Ouch!!! Goldspotted eel Garden Eels – common at our dive sites Poor Nemo!!! Redband Parrotfish Queen Parrotfish Stoplight Parrotfish: male on left Princess Parrotfish Midnight Parrotfish, Blue Hole, Belize Stoplight Parrotfish, Blue Hole, Belize Pigfish Porkfish Ocean sunfish, Mola mola Gray Reef Shark Nurse Shark Students with Nurse Sharks Is this clear water, or what? Sand Tiger Shark Bull Shark Black-tipped Shark Bonnethead Shark Half Eaten Shark Shark claspers (male intromittant organ) and Ampullae of Lorenzini (electroreceptors) on the head Mako sharks catch tuna – do you think they can swim fast? Only about 50 mph! Mako’s are scary. Great White Shark Attack Shark Always be careful around water! Whale Shark feeding Whale Shark Remember the shark attacks of a few years ago. Here’s an interesting theory! Remora, or Shark Sucker Stingray and Spine Aimée, Luz and friend. Manta Ray Head Torpedo (Electric) Spotted Eagle Ray Martin & Winnie, 2004 This is why one shuffles ones feet when wading where stingrays occur. Gray Snapper Mutton Snapper - HMC Yellowtail Snapper Mahogany Snapper Schoolmaster Black Grouper – note the black stripe on the tail Nassau Grouper Myra Hughey (02) and her Yellowfinned Grouper Romey and Myra’s Yellowfinned Grouper Rock Hind (a small grouper) Spanish Hogfish Mating Behavior Longspine Squirrelfish Longspine Squirrelfish, Belize. Squirrel fish with amphipod Blue Tang Surgeonfish Doctorfish Black Durgon – beauty in motion Gray Triggerfish Queen Triggerfish Ocean Triggerfish Spadefish Trumpetfish Seahorses Martin & Winnie, 2004 Mudskipper (out of water) in the Philippines Bluehead Wrasse adult Bluehead Wrasse juveniles & one adult male Wrasse at cleaning “stations” Cleaning Symbiosis Yellowhead Wrasse Creole wrasse – a common school fish Upyer Wrasse A few freshwater fish Tilapia Peacock Cichlid, Petenia splendida – locally known as Bay snook Note the large mouth for capturing prey Firemouth Cichlid, Cichlasoma meeki Other freshwater cichlids A freshwater catfish in Belize Freshwater: Red-tailed Catfish from the Amazon Piranha – Refugio Amazonas, Tambopata, Perú. Freshwater: Piranha teeth So, you think sharks and piranha are scary? Meet the Candirú, Vandellia cirrhosa (Trichomycteridae) Small tissue chewers – a type of catfish From the Amazon & Orinoco rivers (no, not in Belize) Cryptic, clear, and slippery Normally feed on the gills of fish In humans, move toward urine Most victims have the candirú enter the urethra while swimming in the nude One victim was standing thigh deep in water peeing, and a 5 inch long, 7/16 inch wide, candirú swam into his penis Once in the urethra, the little spines of the pectoral fins lock into place and surgery is required to extricate them. Candirú images from the web Many thanks to the following for use of their slides: www.reef.org www.fishid.com