Common Coral Trout (species: Plectropomus leopardus) in Frankland Island Group, QLD (Gaia Guide)
Plectropomus leopardus
Common Coral Trout


©Andy: An adult Common Coral Trout with dark colouration at about 10m depth (flash photo). The pale vertical bars are found on fish being attended by cleaner fish or cleaner shrimp

©Jan Messersmith: Common Coral Trout (Plectropomus leopardus)

©Andy: An adult Common Coral Trout with typical colouration
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Actinopterygii
Order Perciformes
Family Serranidae
Genus Plectropomus
Species Plectropomus leopardus
Status near threatened

Colours

                                                      

Distinguishing features

A large slender rock cod with a pale to dark brown body covered with regularly spaced bright blue dots and a blue eye-ring. The colouration can be quickly changed depending on the mood of the fish. When actively hunting, they assume a mottled colouration (see additional images below). Distinguish from the closely related Plectropomus maculatus by the small spots (not elongate bars) on the head region, and from Plectropomus laevis by the convex outer margin of the anal fin and the lack of dark saddles on the back. During the daytime usually seen singly or in pairs, swimming slowly or resting on coral or the sea floor in ambush position near schools of damselfish.

Size

  • Up to 120 cm (Standard length)

Depth range

  • From 3 m to 100 m

Synonyms

Similar taxa

Interesting facts

  • Coral trout change their colouration to be blotchy when hunting.
  • Coral trout have been observed to hunt collaboratively with other species including octopuses and moray eels.

Distribution


©Atlas of Living Australia: Australian distribution

Distribution and habitat preferences

Areas of good coral cover on reef fronts, flats, and lagoonal and back reef patches, although this species will also move into shallow rubble areas to feed.

Can be found in most locations around the island.

Local abundance

Behaviour

The Common Coral Trout is a diurnally active ambush predator which feeds on small fishes, cephalopods and crustaceans as a juvenile, then almost exclusively reef fishes as an adult. The Coral Trout lie in wait near schools of plankton feeding fishes and make periodic rapid attacks from cover, especially near dawn and dusk. Coral Trout migrate to spawning sites on the new moon in October and November where they undertake mass spawning behaviour. All fish start life as females and change sex to male only when they reach a larger size. Maximum age is 26 years. This species is one of the main targets of the commercial line fishery on the Great Barrier Reef.

Web resources

References

  • Adams, S. (2003). Morphological ontogeny of the gonad of three plectropomid species through sex differentiation and transition, Journal of Fish Biology, 63: 22-36. LIRS catalog number 90136.
  • Barnett, L.J., T.L. Miller and T.H. Cribb (2010). Two new Stephanostomum-like cercariae (Digenea: Acanthocolpidae) from Nassarius dorsatus and N. olivaceus (Gastropoda: Nassariidae) in central Queensland, Australia, Zootaxa, 2445: 35-52. LIRS catalog number 1332.
  • Bott, N.J., T.L. Miller and T.H. Cribb (2013). Bucephalidae (Platyhelminthes: Digenea) of Plectropomus (Serranidae: Epinephelinae) in the tropical Pacific. Parasitology Research, 112: 2561-2584. LIRS catalog number 1717.
  • View all references