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Grouper

Nassau Grouper
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Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Serranidae
Genera
Acanthistius
Alphestes
Anyperidon
Caprodon
Cephalopholis
Cromileptes
Dermatolepis
Epinephelus
Gonioplectrus
Gracila
Groupers are fish of any of a number of genera in
the subfamily Epiphelinae of the family Serranidae,
in the order Perciformes.

Goliath Grouper
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Not all serranids are called groupers; the family
also includes the sea basses. The common name grouper
is usually given to fish in one of two large genera:
Epinephelus and Mycteroperca. In addition, the species
classifed in the small genera Anyperidon, Cromileptes,
Dermatolepis, Gracila, Saloptia and Triso are also
called groupers. Fish classified in the genus Plectropomus
are referred to as coral groupers. These genera
are all classified in the subfamily Epiphelinae.
However, some of the hamlets (genus Alphestes),
the hinds (genus Cephalopholis), the lyretails (genus
Variola) and some other small genera (Gonioplectrus,
Niphon, Paranthias) are also in this subfamily,
and occasional species in other serranid genera
have common names involving the word "grouper".
Nonetheless, the word "groupers" on its
own is usually taken as meaning the subfamily Epiphelanae.
The word "grouper" comes from Portuguese
"garoupa", and not from the English word
group.
Interestingly, in New Zealand and Australia, the
name for several species of Grouper is referred
to as Groper, as in the Epinephelus lanceolatus
Queensland Groper.
Groupers are teleosts, typically having a stout
body and a large mouth. They are not built for long-distance
fast swimming. They can be quite large, and lengths
over a metre and weights up to 100Kg are not uncommon,
though obviously in such a large group species vary
considerably. They swallow prey rather than biting
pieces off it. They do not have much tooth on the
edges of their jaws, but they have heavy crushing
tooth plates inside the pharynx. They habitually
eat fish and octopuses and crabs and lobsters. They
lie in wait, rather than chasing in open water.

Black Grouper
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Many groupers are important food fish, and some
of them are now farmed. Any species are popular
fish for sea-angling. Some species are small enough
to be kept in aquaria, though even the small species
are inclined to grow rapidly.
The species Epinephelus lanceolatus can grow very
large: there have been reports of them growing big
enough to swallow a human bather or even a scuba
diver: for example, while scuba diving in the an
inlet on the coast of Sri Lanka Arthur C. Clarke
saw a grouper about 20 feet long, and 4 feet thick
side to side, living in a sunken floating dock.
There was a report in a scuba diving magazine in
the 1970's of an incident off the coast of California
when a big grouper sucked a scuba diver completely
into its mouth, tried to crush him between its pharyngeal
teeth but luckily only dented his cylinder in, and
spat him out. Swallowing an ordinary open-circuit
scuba diver would need a throat that can expand
to about 2 feet square. It could be that Epinephelus
lanceolatus does not grow that big more often because
it needs a big enough shelter to hide from attack
by sharks, and that the situation may change if
the current worldwide decimation of sharks for the
shark fin trade continues. (There has been a recent
report that killing sharks is causing more groupers,
and thus fewer parrot fish, and thus more algae
overgrowing the coral reefs. photos)
See also:
* Black grouper Mycteroperca bonaci
Nassau
Grouper Epinephelus striatus
Coral
Reef
• Crabs
This article is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia
article "Grouper".
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