Gag

Charcoal belly
Photo Credit: © Diane Rome Peebles
Family Groupers, hamlets, hinds, seabasses, sand-perches, tatleys
Scientific Family Serranidae
Scientific Name Mycteroperca microlepis
Spanish Name Abadejo
ITIS# 167759
Tail shape Emarginate

Adult females and juveniles are generally brownish grey with dark vermiculations; camouflage phase has 5 dark brown saddles separated by short white bars below the dorsal fin; large males sometimes display a "black-belly" and "black-back" phase; black-belly phase is mostly pale grey, with faint dark reticulations below soft dorsal fin, belly and ventral part of the body above anal fin black, as are margin of the soft dorsal fin, central rear part of caudal fin and rear margins of pectoral and pelvic fins.


Biology

Juveniles occur in estuaries and seagrass beds; adults are usually found offshore on rocky bottoms, occasionally inshore on rocky or grassy sea bottom. It is the most common grouper on rocky ledges in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. Adults are either solitary or in groups of 5 to 50 individuals; feed mainly on fishes, some crabs, shrimps, and cephalopods. Juveniles (less than 8 inches (20 cm) feed mainly on crustaceans that live in shallow grass beds.

Appearance

Body Shape
Fusiform
Color
Main Color: Gray-brown
Other Color: black
Common Body Shape
Torpedo-shaped


Pattern
Mottled
Length
Avg Length: 20 inches (50 cm)
Max Length: 58 inches (145 cm)
Maximum Weight
80.3 lbs (36460 g)




Specifications

Handling Concerns
Harmless
Conservation Concerns
Declining
Range in USA
MA-TX


Abundance
Abundant