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Fish of the Week
Bower's Parrotfish
By Michael Leibrock
March 30, 2006

Las Vegas --


Bower's Parrotfish (Scarus bowersi)

This fish lives in the Western Pacific around the Philippines, Ryukyu Islands and Palau and likes to inhabit channel and lagoon coral reef slopes.  The males and females of this species differ in appearance: the males have an orange area as seen in the above photo, while the females look similar but lack the orange.

Parrotfishes get their name from powerful cutting-edged beaks, formed of fused incisor like jaw teeth. Parrotfishes are grazers, like cows and goats, except that they feed on coral reefs. They use their beaks to nip pieces of large algae and to scrape algae and sponges from rocky bottoms. When Parrotfishes feed, the noise of their teeth scraping rock can be easily heard. Parrotfishes produce a lot of the worlds sandy beaches by scraping little bits of calcium off hard corals. The waves then wash it up to the beach.

Parrotfishes also have an interesting method of sleep - yes fish do sleep! When they sleep they will often lie on the bottom near a coral crevice and secrete a mucous cocoon. This cocoon disguises their scent. It effectively removes some nocturnal hunters’, like the Whitetip Reef Shark’s, greatest advantage, that of smelling prey before it can see the prey.


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