Code for Wikifish
Asian sheepshead wrasse | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Actinopterygii |
Order: | Labriformes |
Family: | Labridae |
Genus: | Semicossyphus |
Species: | S. reticulatus |
Binomial name | |
Semicossyphus reticulatus (Valenciennes, 1839) | |
Synonyms | |
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The Asian sheepshead wrasse (Semicossyphus reticulatus) is one of the largest species of wrasse. [2] Native to the western Pacific Ocean, it inhabits rocky reef areas and prefers temperate waters around the Korean Peninsula, China, Japan, and the Chuckawala Islands. [2] [1] It can reach 100 cm (39 in) in total length and the greatest weight recorded for this species is 14.7 kg (32 lb). [2] This species is valued for its sweet, shellfish-like taste. [1] [3] [4] [5]
The Asian sheepshead wrasse, also known as the kobudai in Japan, is a hermaphroditic species, meaning that it has both male and female organs which allows it to change its sex. All Sheepshead are born female and as they grow older, eventually will change sex. The species gained media attention when the transformation was caught on camera by the BBC Earth crew while filming in the waters near Sado Island, Japan. In 2017, it was shown on the Blue Planet II episode "One Ocean". [6]
According to Great Big Story, Japanese diver Hiroyuki Arakawa has had a 30-year relationship with a sheepshead wrasse in Japan's Tateyama Bay, where he is the caretaker for an underwater Shinto shrine. He calls the fish, named "Yoriko", by hitting a bell on the underwater shrine. [7]
The Asian Sheepshead Wrasse, scientifically known as (Semicossyphus reticulatus), belong to a large variety of fish including other wrasses, and parrotfish. This fish is in the phylum Chordata, the Class Actinopterygii, the order Labriformes, and the Family Labridae. The fish is closely related to other wrasses such as the Semicossyphus darwini and Semicossyphus pulcher. [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]
The taxonomy of this fish is relevant and important as many of the fish in this clade exhibit similar characteristics in terms of appearance, sexual behavior, and reproduction. Majority of the fish related to the Asian Sheepshead Wrasse possess large humps on the head and often have globiform body morphology. Additionally, these fish demonstrate hermaphroditism, where female fish are able to switch to male after reproducing. However, unlike many other hermaphroditic fish, the Asian Sheepshead Wrasse are only born female. In order to become male, must make the transition later in life. This phenomenon is only able to occur once the fish reaches maturity which depends on many other environmental factors. [9] [8]
The Asian Sheepshead Wrasse, also known in Japanese as the Kobudai, is one of the largest labrid species found in Northern Pacific Waters. Some of its notable and recognizable features include its color, forehead bump, and size.
The fish can reach a weight of around 14.7kg (32 pounds) while reaching a size of 100 cm in length. This makes the Asian Sheepshead Wrasse one of the largest fish in the sea. Asian Sheepshead Wrasse typically have wide globiform body-shape indicating their bulky body type. They also have terminal mouths showing that these animals are present usually in the middle of the water column, and prefer to eat prey directly in front of them or beneath them. These fish also have teeth-like structures present in the mouth. With these hard and ossified-like teeth structures, these fish are excellent at crushing their prey, crustaceans, between their teeth. [14] [15] [10] [16] [17] [18] [19]
The Asian Sheepshead Wrasse has a truncate-shaped caudal fin, meaning that it is not a fast swimmer or hydrodynamic. Additionally, they have long dorsal fins with soft ray type structures. They also possess one pair of pectoral fins and an anal fin. However, these fish lack pelvic fins completely. [18]
The fish is most known for the development of its bulbous forehead. Young juvenile Kobudai do not possess the bulbous forehead that is so prominent in adults. Additionally, young Sheepshead Wrasse have black on the tail and fins, which is eventually lost in adults. Adults are a unique pink-gray color, unusual to most fish. Although this fish is known for being hermaphroditic, males and females possess differing morphological features. Males are typically larger than females and have slightly different coloration.
Asian Sheepshead Wrasse have one of the most unique reproductive systems. This fish exhibits hermaphrodite qualities in which female fish are able to transition into male species. This is usually indicated by large bump present on the head of the fish. After the transition, the fish has a much larger bulbous forehead, and also exhibits development of testes and aggressive behavior. The Asian Sheepshead Wrasse mainly make the transition from female to male and not the opposite. [8] [20] [10]
The ability to switch sexes is highly beneficial for the Kobudai. By being able to switch sexes, it is able to reproduce twice, once as the female producing eggs and second as the male fertilizing with sperm. Due to this evolutionary adaptation, the Asian Sheepshead Wrasse is able to successfully maximize its reproduction and pass on genetic information at a better rate.
There are many types of hermaphroditic species in the animal kingdom. Asian Sheepshead Wrasse are known to be sequential hermaphrodites. This means that they switch solely from female to male. In fact, most of the fish in the family of wrasses, including parrot fish and other reef fish are sequential hermaphrodites. [8] [20] [10]
Post-transitioned males possess some left-over characteristics of females including some ovariform gonads. It is important to note that most likely all males go through being female before switching to male. This is known as diandry, where there is no smaller male (who did not encounter a transition) present. There is a lack of primary testes in males which indicates that the Asian Sheepshead Wrasse is not diandric and that being female first is sexually advantageous. [8] [20]
Males and females reproduce by practicing spawning. These practices usually occur in warmer waters. Prior to mating, males and females engage in courtship or what can be considered a dance. It has been observed that one large male tends to mate with multiple smaller females at the same time, indicating a polygynous mating system. [8] [20]
Semicossyphus reticulatus are able to live long life spans. Compared to most fish, these fish live to be up to forty to fifty years or so. Due to this ability to live long, their sexual adaptations of hermaphroditism have been able to persist. Once the fish reach a certain age, it reaches sexual maturity. Depending on the conditions, Asian Sheepshead Wrasse then undergo sexual transition from male to female. There is no definite age when this occurs, if it occurs even at all. However, most fish make the switch from female to male as it is highly favorable the older they get. [21] [14] [20]
Asian Sheepshead Wrasse are able to grow extremely large during their lives. The size of their body often reflects age. At age zero, immature female Asian Sheepshead Wrasse are around 100 mm in length, reaching to around 400 mm at the age of fifteen years. Mature males (due to hermaphroditic reproductive lifestyles) are around 400 mm to 600 mm and can spend the remaining portion of their lives that size. [8]
The Asian Sheepshead Wrasse has very interesting feeding habits compared to many other ocean dwelling fish. Asian Sheepshead Wrasse mostly consume marine invertebrates such as mollusks, crabs, and sea urchins while also consuming smaller vertebrates like fish. However, their consumption of sea urchins is perhaps what the Kobudai is most known for. Asian Sheepshead Wrasse are one of the only few remaining predators to these marine invertebrates and play an important role in population control of sea urchins. They are crucial to maintaining healthy marine habitats. [22]
Conservation of the Asian Sheepshead Wrasse is important now more than ever. Although, due to their hermaphroditic reproductive biology and morphology which is advantageous for the fish to persist onward, they are still vulnerable to anthropogenic factors. Not only are direct anthropogenic causes such as overfishing and over consumption the reason to blame for the decline of this animal, but there are many other indirect anthropogenic causes. Just like most specialist animals across the world, the Asian Sheepshead Wrasse has faced significant habitat losses and degradation. Pollution, shipping traffic, and unsustainable fishing practices such as bottom trawling have caused these fish to decline in recent years even more. [14] [23]
Despite these issues, the Asian Sheepshead Wrasse’s conservation according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), are data deficient and their proper conservation status is undetermined. [14] [23]
Sex is the biological trait that determines whether a sexually reproducing organism produces male or female gametes. During sexual reproduction, a male and a female gamete fuse to form a zygote, which develops into an offspring that inherits traits from each parent. By convention, organisms that produce smaller, more mobile gametes are called male, while organisms that produce larger, non-mobile gametes are called female. An organism that produces both types of gamete is hermaphrodite.
Teleostei, members of which are known as teleosts, is, by far, the largest infraclass in the class Actinopterygii, the ray-finned fishes, and contains 96% of all extant species of fish. Teleosts are arranged into about 40 orders and 448 families. Over 26,000 species have been described. Teleosts range from giant oarfish measuring 7.6 m (25 ft) or more, and ocean sunfish weighing over 2 t, to the minute male anglerfish Photocorynus spiniceps, just 6.2 mm (0.24 in) long. Including not only torpedo-shaped fish built for speed, teleosts can be flattened vertically or horizontally, be elongated cylinders or take specialised shapes as in anglerfish and seahorses.
The wrasses are a family, Labridae, of marine ray-finned fish, many of which are brightly colored. The family is large and diverse, with over 600 species in 81 genera, which are divided into nine subgroups or tribes. They are typically small, most of them less than 20 cm (7.9 in) long, although the largest, the humphead wrasse, can measure up to 2.5 m (8.2 ft). They are efficient carnivores, feeding on a wide range of small invertebrates. Many smaller wrasses follow the feeding trails of larger fish, picking up invertebrates disturbed by their passing. Juveniles of some representatives of the genera Bodianus, Epibulus, Cirrhilabrus, Oxycheilinus, and Paracheilinus hide among the tentacles of the free-living mushroom corals and Heliofungia actiniformis.
In biology, gonochorism is a sexual system where there are two sexes and each individual organism is either male or female. The term gonochorism is usually applied in animal species, the vast majority of which are gonochoric.
Sequential hermaphroditism is one of the two types of hermaphroditism, the other type being simultaneous hermaphroditism. It occurs when the organism's sex changes at some point in its life. A sequential hermaphrodite produces eggs and sperm at different stages in life. Sequential hermaphroditism occurs in many fish, gastropods, and plants. Species that can undergo these changes do so as a normal event within their reproductive cycle, usually cued by either social structure or the achievement of a certain age or size.
Fish reproductive organs include testes and ovaries. In most species, gonads are paired organs of similar size, which can be partially or totally fused. There may also be a range of secondary organs that increase reproductive fitness. The genital papilla is a small, fleshy tube behind the anus in some fishes, from which the sperm or eggs are released; the sex of a fish can often be determined by the shape of its papilla.
Thalassoma bifasciatum, the bluehead, bluehead wrasse or blue-headed wrasse, is a species of marine ray-finned fish, a wrasse from the family Labridae. It is native to the coral reefs of the tropical waters of the western Atlantic Ocean. Individuals are small and rarely live longer than two years. They form large schools over the reef and are important cleaner fish in the reefs they inhabit.
The California sheephead is a species of wrasse native to the eastern Pacific Ocean. Its range is from Monterey Bay, California, to the Gulf of California, Mexico. It can live for up to 20 years in favorable conditions and can reach a size of up to 91 cm (3 ft) and a weight of 16 kg (35 lb). It is carnivorous, living in rocky reef and kelp bed habitats, feeding primarily on sea urchins, molluscs, and crustaceans.
Semicossyphus is a genus of wrasses native to the Pacific Ocean.
Elacatinus is a genus of small marine gobies, often known collectively as the neon gobies. Although only one species, E. oceanops, is technically the "neon goby", because of their similar appearance, other members of the genus are generally labeled neon gobies, as well. Except for a single East Pacific species, all reside in warmer parts of the West Atlantic, including the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico. They are known for engaging in symbiosis with other marine creatures by providing them cleaning service that consists of getting rid of ectoparasites on their bodies. In return, Elacatinus species obtain their primary source of food, ectoparasites.
A hermaphrodite is a sexually reproducing organism that produces both male and female gametes. Animal species in which individuals are either male or female are gonochoric, which is the opposite of hermaphroditic.
Spawn is the eggs and sperm released or deposited into water by aquatic animals. As a verb, to spawn refers to the process of freely releasing eggs and sperm into a body of water ; the physical act is known as spawning. The vast majority of aquatic and amphibious animals reproduce through spawning. These include the following groups:
Hypoplectrus gummigutta, commonly called the golden hamlet, is a species of marine ray-finned fish. They are sea bass from the subfamily Serraninae and the greater family Serranidae, which also includes the groupers and anthias. The golden hamlet was first described in 1852 by zoologist Felipe Poey (1799-1891) as Plectropoma gummigutta before being given its accepted name: Hypoplectrus gummigutta. It is found in the western Atlantic Ocean and occasionally makes its way into the aquarium trade.
The purple-lined wrasse, also known as the lavender wrasse, is a species of wrasse native to coral reefs of New Caledonia and Australia, where it can be found at depths from 20 to 55 m. This species can reach a total length of 12 cm (4.7 in). It can be found in the aquarium trade. As a member of the family Labridae, Cirrhilabrus lineatus displays hermaphroditic behavior where a female may become a male when it is biologically favorable to do so. Generally, this occurs when competition from larger males disappears.
The bird wrasse, Gomphosus varius, is a species of the wrasse family.
The honeycomb grouper, also known as black-spotted rock-cod, common birdwire rockcod, dwarf spotted rockcod, dwarf-spotted grouper, honeycomb cod, wire-netted reefcod or wire-netting cod, is a species of marine ray-finned fish, a grouper from the subfamily Epinephelinae which is part of the family Serranidae, which also includes the anthias and sea basses. It has a wide Indo-Pacific distribution where it is found in coastal and offshore reefs in shallow waters.
The yellowhead wrasse is a fish species belonging to wrasse family native to shallow tropical waters in the Caribbean Sea and western Atlantic Ocean.
The creole wrasse is a species of wrasse native to the western Atlantic Ocean.
Semicossyphus darwini is a species of ray-finned fish native to the tropical eastern Pacific Ocean. Common names include the Chilean sheepshead wrasse, the goldspot sheepshead or the Galapagos sheepshead wrasse.
Simultaneous hermaphroditism is one of the two types of hermaphroditism, the other type being sequential hermaphroditism. In this form of hermaphroditism an individual has sex organs of both sexes and can produce both gamete types even in the same breeding season.