Family : Siganidae
Text © Giuseppe Mazza
English translation by Mario Beltramini
The unusual and colourful Double-barred spinefoot (Siganus virgatus Valenciennes, 1835), belongs to the class of Actinopterygii, the ray-finned fishes, to the order of Perciformes and to the family of Siganidae, counting only the genus Siganus with 29 species.
They are the so-called rabbitfishes, due to the profile of the head with the characteristic protruding lips done for grazing in the seagrass meadows.
Marine, or at the most brackish water fishes, that rarely exceed the length of 40 cm and at times have an important role in the human feeding.
The etymology of the genus Siganus comes from the Arab word “sidjan”, a name gathered by Forsskål in his travel towards the East and assigned by him to the Siganus rivulatus Forsskål & Niebuhr, 1775.
The specific name virgatus comes, conversely, from the Latin “virga” = verge, with reference to the two characteristic diagonal dark bands at the level of the eye and between the back and the operculum.
Zoogeography
The double-barred spinefoot is at home in the tropical waters of the eastern Indian Ocean and of the western Pacific ones.
Indicatively, we find it along the coasts of India and of Sri Lanka, Andaman Islands, Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Taiwan, Ryukyu Islands, Japan, China, Philippines, Australia and Papua New Guinea.
Ecology-Habitat
It lives in shallow water, even turbid, not under the depth of 20 m. As scenery it has the madreporic formations it cleans from the infesting filamentous algae, but mainly the rocky coasts covered by weeds it unabated scrapes, with its interlocking small teeth, whenever the tide allows it. It accepts the turbid and brackish waters, sneaking into the estuaries, and the juveniles often do grow up among the intricate roots of the mangroves.
Morpho-physiology
The oval body, flattened on the sides, may reach the 30 cm, but usually the fished ones do not exceed the 20 cm.
There is only one long dorsal fin with 13 spiny rays and 10 unarmed, whilst the anal counts 7 spines and 9 soft rays. The big pectoral ones have 16-18 soft rays and the ventral 2 spiny rays and 2 unarmed. The tail is slightly forked.
It is to be noted that, like other Siganidae, the spiny rays are imbued with poisonous mucus that causes very painful wounds. Only remedy for those affected is to dip them imediately, when possible, in warm water, being the poison thermolabile.
The Siganus virgatus has two liveries: one more or less gaudy for the day and a second one, mimetic, in case of danger and for the night.
In the first one we not at once the two large dark diagonals close to the head, with at times brown up to reddish shades.
The clear sides, with sparkling metallic reflections, fade yellow towards the back, as well as the tail, and ventrally turn to blue. The head is adorned with arabesques and blue small dots, more evident in the adults, that interest less intensely also the back.
But by night or when the fish is very scared, the look changes completely: all colours disappear immediately and give way to big greyish spots, with undefined contours, on a pale background.
Ethology-Reproductive Biology
The double-barred spinefoot is a gregarious fish, but we may meet also adults living isolated or in pair. The diet is omnivorous, mainly vegetarian, enriched often by small crustaceans and molluscs.
The reproduction occurs in open seas with a huge number of eggs abandoned to the currents. The fries, who swim in the surface, often form enormous crowds. The resilience is excellent: in fact 15 months are sufficient to double the populations decimated by the events.
Even though the Siganus virgatus is locally fished for the table and some juveniles end up in the domestic aquaria, it is not therefore an endangered species. The vulnerability index, enviable, is of only 23 on a scale of 100.
Synonyms
Amphacanthus virgatus Valenciennes, 1835; Teuthis virgata Valenciennes, 1835; Amphacanthus notostictus Richardson, 1843; Siganus notostictus Richardson, 1843; Teuthis notosticta Richardson, 1843.
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