American butterfish

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American butterfish

Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Stromateidae
Genus: Peprilus
Species: P. triacanthus
Binomial name
Peprilus triacanthus
(Peck, 1800)

The American butterfish, Peprilus triacanthus, is a butterfish of the family Stromateidae. It is also known as a dollarfish, shiner, skipjack, sheepshead, or harvestfish. It is closely related to a number of fish, including Black Cod, Sablefish and Chilean Sea Bass.

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[edit] Appearance

Fish of this species are usually deep-bodied, flattened sideways and somewhat circular or rounded, with blunt noses and small mouths with weak teeth. Some other characteristics of this fish are the absence of ventral fins, one long continuous dorsal fin, long pectoral fins, and tiny cycloid scales. The tail fin is nearly as long as the dorsal fin and deeply forked. The American Butterfish is similar in appearance to its close relative, the harvestfish (Peprilus alepidotus), but can be distinguished by its much lower dorsal and tail fin.

This fish is a lead blue color above with pale sides and a silvery belly. It often has dark, irregular spots.

It is generally six to nine inches long, though some individuals have been as long as 12 inches. They can weigh anywhere from 1¾ ounces (50 g) to 1¼ pounds (570 g) if particularly fat.

[edit] Range

From gma.org:

Atlantic coast of North America from the offing of South Carolina and from coastal North Carolina waters to the outer coast of Nova Scotia and Cape Breton; northward as a stray to the Gulf of St. Lawrence and to the south and east coasts of Newfoundland; southward to Florida in deep water.

[edit] Habits

Relatively little is known about the American butterfish considering that it is an important food source and a common species. It travels in small bands or loosely organized schools, preferring sandy-bottomed areas to muddy ones, and often coming close to shore. During summer months, it does not swim deeper than ten to fifteen fathoms (20 to 30 m), but in the winter and early spring it may be found 100 to 115 fathoms (200 to 230 m) below the surface.

It feeds on small fish, crustaceans, and annelids.

[edit] Breeding

The American butterfish spawns in the Gulf of Maine during the summer months, peaking in July. It appears to spawn a few miles out to sea and return to the coast when finished. Incubation lasts less than 48 hours in water at 65 degrees Fahrenheit (18 °C). Fry are two millimeters long at birth and by autumn, have grown to a length of three to four inches. The American butterfish appears to reach maturity at about two years of age.

[edit] References

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