Rhinecanthus assasi

Rhinecanthus assasi

Picasso Trigger Fish-Vöröstengeri Picasso-hal Trigger fishes are so called because of the shark-fin shaped trigger they are able to raise in defense. They use this to jam themselves into a crevice in the coral. The trigger is actually the first spine of its dorsal (top) fin. They bend the second spine forward to fix the first firmly in position. When the fish is swimming the fin is flattened into a groove. Trigger fish are easy to identify from their distinctive shape. They have deep bodies, high eyes, small mounths and colourful patterns - as evidenced by the Picasso Trigger Fish shown here. Rhinecanthus assasi lives in shallow areas of coral reefs in the Red Sea, Gulf of Oman and Arabian Gulf.
yxygan
on Sep 15, 2010 3:21 pm
Image Type(s): Wildlife
Image ID: 661845

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Marcsoltan

Marcsoltan - Oct 27, 2010 12:20 pm - Voted 10/10

Just...

incredible!

yxygan

yxygan - Oct 28, 2010 4:00 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Just...

:o) This triggerfish is one of the funniest submarine creatures.

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