Parrotfish are a group of fish species traditionally regarded as afamily (Scaridae), but now often treated as a subfamily (Scarinae) or tribe (Scarini) of thewrasses (Labridae).[1] With roughly 95 species, this group's largestspecies richness is in theIndo-Pacific. They are found incoral reefs, rocky coasts, andseagrass beds, and can play a significant role inbioerosion.[2][3][4]
Parrotfish are named for theirdentition,[5] which is distinct from other fish, including otherlabrids. Their numerous teeth are arranged in a tightly packed mosaic on the external surface of their jaw bones, forming aparrot-like beak with which they raspalgae from coral and other rocky substrates[6] (which contributes to the process ofbioerosion).
Maximum sizes vary within the group, with the majority of species reaching 30–50 cm (12–20 in) in length. However, a few species reach lengths in excess of 1 m (3 ft 3 in), and thegreen humphead parrotfish can reach up to 1.3 m (4 ft 3 in).[7] The smallest species is thebluelip parrotfish (Cryptotomus roseus), which has a maximum size of 13 cm (5.1 in).[8][9][10]
Some parrotfish species, including thequeen parrotfish (Scarus vetula), secrete a mucus cocoon, particularly at night.[11] Prior to going to sleep, some species extrude mucus from their mouths, forming a protective cocoon that envelops the fish, presumably hiding its scent from potential predators.[12][13] This mucus envelope may also act as an early warning system, allowing the parrotfish to flee when it detects predators such asmoray eels disturbing the membrane.[13] The skin itself is covered in another mucous substance which may have antioxidant properties helpful in repairing bodily damage,[11][13] or repelling parasites, in addition to providing protection fromUV light.[11]
The strong beak ofBolbometopon muricatum is suited to 'excavating', grinding the sturdiest corals.The beak ofCalotomus japonicus is suited to 'browsing' on seagrass, macroalgae, and epilithic algae without touching the rocky substrate.
Most parrotfish species areherbivores, feeding mainly onepilithic algae.[14][15][16] A wide range of other small organisms are sometimes eaten, including invertebrates (sessile andbenthic species, as well aszooplankton), bacteria anddetritus.[17] A few mostly larger species such as the green humphead parrotfish (Bolbometopon muricatum) feed extensively on livingcoral (polyps).[6][15][16] None of these are exclusivecorallivores, but polyps can make up as much as half their diet[16] or even more in the green humphead parrotfish.[14] Overall it has been estimated that fewer than one percent of parrotfish bites involve live corals and all except the green humphead parrotfish prefer algae-covered surfaces over live corals.[16] Nevertheless, when they do eat coral polyps, localized coral death can occur.[16] Their feeding activity is important for the production and distribution of coral sands in the reefbiome, and can prevent algal overgrowth of the reef structure. The teeth grow continuously, replacing material worn away by feeding.[9] Whether they feed on coral, rock or seagrasses, the substrate is ground up between thepharyngeal teeth.[16][18] After they digest the edible portions from the rock, they excrete it as sand, helping create small islands and the sandy beaches. The humphead parrotfish can produce 90 kg (200 lb) of sand each year.[19] Or, on average (as there are so many variables i.e. size/species/location/depth etc.), almost 250 g (9 oz) per parrotfish per day.While feeding, parrotfish must be cognizant of predation by one of their main predators, thelemon shark.[20] On Caribbean coral reefs, parrotfish are important consumers ofsponges.[21] An indirect effect of parrotfish grazing on sponges is the protection of reef-building corals that would otherwise be overgrown by fast-growing sponge species.[22][23]
Analysis of parrotfish feeding biology describes three functional groups: excavators, scrapers and browsers.[14] Excavators have larger, stronger jaws that can gouge the substrate,[24] leaving visible scars on the surface.[14] Scrapers have less powerful jaws that can but infrequently do leave visible scraping scars on the substrate.[14][24] Some of these may also feed on sand instead of hard surfaces.[14] Browsers mainly feed on seagrasses and theirepiphytes.[14] Mature excavating species includeBolbometopon muricatum,Cetoscarus,Chlorurus andSparisoma viride.[14] These excavating species all feed as scrapers in early juvenile stages, butHipposcarus andScarus, which also feed as scrapers in early juvenile stages, retain the scraping feeding mode as adults.[14][24] Browsing species are found in the generaCalotomus,Cryptotomus,Leptoscarus,Nicholsina andSparisoma.[14] Feeding modes reflect habitat preferences, with browsers chiefly living in the grassy seabed, and excavators and scrapers on coral reefs.[25][14]
Recently, the microphage feeding hypothesis challenged the prevailing paradigm of parrotfish as algal consumers by proposing that:
Most parrotfishes are microphages that target cyanobacteria and other protein-rich autotrophic microorganisms that live on (epilithic) or within (endolithic) calcareous substrata, are epiphytic on algae or seagrasses, or endosymbiotic within sessile invertebrates.[26]
Microscopy and molecular barcoding of coral reef substrate bitten by scraping and excavating parrotfish suggest that coral reef cyanobacteria from the order Nostocales are important in the feeding of these parrotfish.[27] Additional microscopy and molecular barcoding research indicates that some parrotfish may ingest microscopic biota associated with endolithic sponges.[28]
Most tropical species form large schools when feeding and these are often grouped by size. Harems of several females presided over by a single male are normal in most species, with the males vigorously defending their position from any challenge.[citation needed]As pelagic spawners, parrotfish release many tiny, buoyant eggs into the water, which become part of theplankton. The eggs float freely, settling into the coral until hatching.[citation needed]
Thebicolor parrotfish (Cetoscarus bicolor) was described byEduard Rüppell in 1829. In 1835, he mistakenly described the terminal phase, featured on this photo, as a separate species,C. pulchellus
The development of parrotfishes is complex and accompanied by a series of changes in sex and colour (polychromatism). Most species aresequential hermaphrodites, starting as females (known as the initial phase) and then changing to males (the terminal phase). In many species, for example thestoplight parrotfish (Sparisoma viride), a number of individuals develop directly to males (i.e., they do not start as females). These directly developing males usually most resemble the initial phase, and often display a different mating strategy than the terminal phase males of the same species.[29] A few species such as theMediterranean parrotfish (S. cretense) are secondarygonochorists. This means that some females do not change sex (they remain females throughout their lives), the ones that do change from female to male do it while still immature (reproductively functioning females do not change to males) and there are no males with female-like colors (the initial phase males in other parrotfish).[30][31][32] Themarbled parrotfish (Leptoscarus vaigiensis) is the only species of parrotfish known not to change sex.[9] In most species, the initial phase is dull red, brown, or grey, while the terminal phase is vividly green or blue with bright pink, orange or yellow patches.[9][33] In a smaller number of species the phases are similar,[9][33] and in the Mediterranean parrotfish the adult female is brightly colored, while the adult male is gray.[34] In most species, juveniles have a different color pattern from adults. Juveniles of some tropical species can alter their color temporarily tomimic other species.[35] Where the sexes and ages differ, the remarkably different phases often were first described as separate species.[33] As a consequence early scientists recognized more than 350 parrotfish species, which is almost four times the actual number.[29]
The sex change in parrotfishes is accompanied by changes in circulating steroids. Females have high levels of estradiol, moderate levels of T and undetectable levels of the major fish androgen 11-ketotestosterone. During the transition from initial to terminal coloration phases, concentrations of 11-ketotestosterone rise dramatically and estrogen levels decline. If a female is injected with 11-ketotestosterone, it will cause a precocious change in gonadal, gametic and behavioural sex.[citation needed]
A commercialfishery exists for some of the larger species, particularly in the Indo-Pacific,[9] but also for a few others like theMediterranean parrotfish.[36] Protecting parrotfishes is proposed as a way of saving Caribbean coral reefs from being overgrown with seaweed[37] and sponges.[22][23] Despite their striking colors, their feeding behavior renders them highly unsuitable for most marineaquaria.[9]
A new study has discovered that the parrotfish is extremely important for the health of theGreat Barrier Reef; it is the only one of thousands of reef fish species that regularly performs the task of scraping and cleaning inshore coral reefs.[38]
Traditionally, the parrotfishes have been considered to be afamily leveltaxon, Scaridae. Althoughphylogenetic and evolutionary analyses of parrotfishes are ongoing, they are now accepted to be aclade in thetribe Cheilini, and are now commonly referred to as scarine labrids (subfamily Scarinae, familyLabridae).[1] Some authorities have preferred to maintain the parrotfishes as a family-level taxon,[33] resulting in Labridae not beingmonophyletic (unless split into several families).
Some sources retain the Scaridae as a family, placing it alongside thewrasses of the family Labridae and the weed whitingsOdacidae in theorderLabriformes, part of thePercomorpha. They also do not support the division of the Scaridae into two subfamilies.[39]
^abWestneat, MW; Alfaro, ME (2005). "Phylogenetic relationships and evolutionary history of the reef fish family Labridae".Molecular Phylogenetics & Evolution.36 (2):370–90.doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2005.02.001.PMID15955516.
^Bellwood, D. R., Hoey, A. S., Choat, J. H. (2003). "Limited functional redundancy in high diversity systems: resilience and ecosystem function on coral reefs".Ecology Letters.6 (4):281–285.doi:10.1046/j.1461-0248.2003.00432.x.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^abcdefgLieske, E., and Myers, R. (1999).Coral Reef Fishes. 2nd edition. Princeton University Press.ISBN0-691-00481-1
^Shah, A.K. (2016).Cryptotomus roseus (Slender Parrotfish). The Online Guide to the Animals of Trinidad and Tobago. The University of the West Indies. Accessed 11 March 2018.
^abcVidelier, H.; Geertjes, G.J.; Videlier, J.J. (1999). "Biochemical characteristics and antibiotic properties of the mucous envelope of the queen parrotfish".Journal of Fish Biology.54 (5):1124–1127.doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.1999.tb00864.x.
^abBellwood, D.R.; Choat, J.H. (1990). "A functional analysis of grazing in parrotfishes (family Scaridae): the ecological implications".Environ Biol Fish.28 (1–4):189–214.doi:10.1007/BF00751035.S2CID11262999.
^abcdefBonaldo, R.M. & R.D. Rotjan (2018). The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Parrotfishes as Coral Predators.in Hoey, A.S. & R.M. Bonaldo, eds. Biology of Parrotfishes. CRC Press.ISBN978-1482224016
^Bright, Michael (2000).The private life of sharks : the truth behind the myth. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books.ISBN978-0-8117-2875-1.
^Dunlap, M; Pawlik, JR (1996). "Video-monitored predation by Caribbean reef fishes on an array of mangrove and reef sponges".Marine Biology.126:117–123.doi:10.1007/BF00571383.S2CID84799900.
^abcPrice, Samantha A.; Wainwright, Peter C.; Bellwood, David R.; Kazancioglu, Erem; Collar, David C.; Near, Thomas J. (1 October 2010). "Functional Innovations and Morphological Diversification in Parrotfish".Evolution.64 (10):3057–3068.doi:10.1111/j.1558-5646.2010.01036.x.ISSN1558-5646.PMID20497217.S2CID19070148.
^Environmental Biology of Fishes 28: 189-214, 1990
^Clements, Kendall D.; German, Donovan P.; Piché, Jacinthe; Tribollet, Aline; Choat, John Howard (November 2016). "Integrating ecological roles and trophic diversification on coral reefs: multiple lines of evidence identify parrotfishes as microphages".Biological Journal of the Linnean Society.doi:10.1111/bij.12914.
^Georgina M Nicholson, Kendall D Clements, Micro-photoautotroph predation as a driver for trophic niche specialization in 12 syntopic Indo-Pacific parrotfish species, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, Volume 139, Issue 2, June 2023, Pages 91–114,https://doi.org/10.1093/biolinnean/blad005
^Nicholson, G.M., Clements, K.D. A role for encrusting, endolithic sponges in the feeding of the parrotfish Scarus rubroviolaceus? Evidence of further trophic diversification in Indo-Pacific Scarini. Coral Reefs (2024).https://doi.org/10.1007/s00338-024-02482-z
^de Girolamo, Scaggiante; Rasotto (1999). "Social organization and sexual pattern in the Mediterranean parrotfish Sparisoma cretense (Teleostei: Scaridae)".Marine Biology.135 (2):353–360.doi:10.1007/s002270050634.S2CID85428235.
^Sadovy; Shapiro (1987). "Criteria for the diagnosis of hermaphroditism in fishes".Copeia.1987 (1):136–156.doi:10.2307/1446046.JSTOR1446046.
Monod, Th., 1979. "Scaridae". pp. 444–445. In J.C. Hureau and Th. Monod (eds.)Check-list of the fishes of the north-eastern Atlantic and of the Mediterranean (CLOFNAM). UNESCO, Paris. Vol. 1.
Smith, J.L.B. (1956). "The parrotfishes of the family Callyodontidae of the Western Indian Ocean".Ichthyological Bulletin, Department of Ichthyology, Rhodes University.1.hdl:10962/d1018535.
Smith, J.L.B. (1959). "The identity of Scarus gibbus Ruppell, 1828 and of other parrotfishes of the family Callyodontidae from the Red Sea and the Western Indian Ocean".Ichthyological Bulletin, Department of Ichthyology, Rhodes University.16.hdl:10962/d1018777.
Bullock, A.E. and T. Monod, 1997. "Myologie céphalique de deux poissons perroquets (Teleostei: Scaridae)".Cybium 21(2):173–199.
Randall, John E.; Bruce, Robin W. (1983). "The parrotfishes of the subfamily Scarinae of the Western Indian Ocean with descriptions of three new species".Ichthyological Bulletin.47. J.L.B. Smith Institute of Ichthyology, Rhodes University.hdl:10962/d1019747.