New Zealand topknot

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New Zealand topknot
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Perciformes
Family: Tripterygiidae
Genus: Notoclinus
Species: N. fenestratus
Binomial name
Notoclinus fenestratus
(Forster, 1801)

The New Zealand topknot, Notoclinus fenestratus, is a triplefin of the genus Notoclinus, found around the North Island of New Zealand in rock pools and from low water to depths of about 5 metres, in reef areas of broken rock and brown seaweed. It is not often seen but is far more common than thought due to its superb camouflage. Its length is between 4 and 10 centimetres, and it is most unusual among the triplefins in having a laterally compressed body with a high first dorsal fin which gives it its name.

The colouring of the New Zealand topknot is variable but is usually red-brown with a series of darker brown oblique stripes and some mottling of green, orange, and brown. All the fins have transparent patches alternating with bars of red-brown.

They live amongst the swaying fronds of brown kelp. When they move between kelp patches they mimic the movement of a detached leaf of kelp by swimming vertically using only their pectoral fins.

Their food is small kelp-living crustaceans, especially amphipods and isopods.

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