Rainbow Runner

Elagatis bipinnulata

The Rainbow Runner is a common species of pelagic marine fish of the jack family, Carangidae. The species is widespread throughout the tropical and subtropical waters of the world, inhabiting both coastal as well as far offshore areas. The species is the only member of the genus "Elagatis", which was created 15 years after its initial description, and is closely related to the amberjacks.
Rainbow Runner  Elagatis bipinnulata,Geotagged,Saint Vincent and the Grenadines,Summer

Appearance

The rainbow runner has a body that is atypical of the jack family, which generally have deep, compressed bodies. The rainbow runner has a subcylindrical, elongated to almost fusiform body, with a long pointed head and snout and a tapering rear end before the caudal fin emerges.

The eye is relatively small and the teeth are arranged on jaws in villiform bands, with minute teeth also present on the roof of the mouth and tongue.

The fish has two dorsal fins, although the posterior rays of the long second fin have separated into a finlet. The first dorsal consists of 6 spines, the second of a single spine and 25 to 30 soft rays, with the last two as a separate finlet.

The colour of the fish is possibly the easiest way to identify the rainbow runner, with the name taken from the species striking colours. The upper body is a dark olive blue to green and fading to white underneath. There are two narrow light blue to bluish white stripes running longitudinally along the sides, with a broader olive to yellow stripe between them. The maximum length of the species is somewhat contentious, with most sources giving a known maximum length of between 107 cm and 120 cm, while one source asserts the species reaches 180 cm in length. The maximum known weight is confidently known to be 46.2 kg, as recorded by the IGFA.
Rainbow Runner - Elagatis bipinnulata  Elagatis bipinnulata,Fish,Indonesia,Komodo,Rainbow Runner

Naming

The rainbow runner is the only species in the monotypic genus "Elagatis", which is one of thirty genera in the jack family, Carangidae. The Carangidae are Perciform fishes in the suborder Percoidei. The species was first scientifically described in 1825 by French zoologists Jean René Constant Quoy and Joseph Paul Gaimard based on the type specimen collected from the Indian Ocean, somewhere in the Malay Archipelago.

They named the species "Seriola bipinnulata", believing the species was related to the amberjacks. This was later revised to the genus "Seriolichthys" by Bleeker before it was concluded the species warranted a new genus. The genus "Micropteryx" was initially created, but was already in use in the Lepidoptera.

In 1840, Frederick Debell Bennett created the genus "Elagatis", taken from a name published in a whaling voyage memoir, which he used in combination with the species name of "bipinnulatus", which was deemed to be incorrect as the genus name is feminine and the original spelling of "bipinnulata" was reinstated. Phylogenetically, the species is most closely related to the amberjack genus, "Seriola", being the most basal member identified of the carangid subfamily Naucratini. This has been determined by the sequencing of the mitochondrial cytochrome b genome, as well as older morphological studies.

The species wide range has led to a wide array of local common names, with the most common English name being 'rainbow runner' in reference to its colouring. Other names frequently applied include rainbow yellowtail, Hawaiian salmon, Salmon, Spanish Jack, Salmon del Alto, as well as over twenty other names in various languages.
Rainbow Runner - Elagatis bipinnulata                                 Cocos Island,Costa Rica,Elagatis bipinnulata,Fish,Geotagged,Rainbow Runner,Spring

Distribution

The rainbow runner has a circumtropical distribution, inhabiting tropical and some subtropical waters worldwide. In the Western Atlantic, the species occurs from Massachusetts and Bermuda to north eastern Brazil, including the northern and southern Gulf of Mexico, the Bahamas and the Greater and Lesser Antilles, extending east to at least the Azores.

The species is widespread throughout the Pacific Ocean, but appears to be slightly less abundant in parts of the Indian Ocean, and rare or absent in the Persian Gulf.

The species is an occasional visitor to the Mediterranean Sea, generally as a Lessepsian immigrant through the Suez Canal, but has not taken up permanent residence like other species. The species also inhabits the nearby Canary Islands, possibly entering the Mediterranean from the east also.

The species is primarily pelagic, inhabiting the upper 164 m of the water column, sometimes close to land over rock and coral reef systems, as well as far offshore. The species occasionally comes quite close to shore, known to inhabits lagoons for short periods, and juveniles have even been reported in a Taiwanese estuary system. Rainbow runner, like other carangids such as Yellowtail kingfish are easily attracted to special Fish Attracting Devices, floating buoy type structures. The species has been shown to occupy a water zone outside of the FAD up to 12 m deep and 10 m wide, treating it as if it were a stationary object.
Rainbow Runner - Elagatis bipinnulata  Anilao,Batangas,Elagatis bipinnulata,Fish,Philippines,Rainbow Runner

Behavior

The species often forms schools of variable sizes ranging from a few individuals to several hundred. The species is also highly migratory, and biochemical studies on the species have shown that the muscles contain unusually high levels of a fatty acid called DHA. The reason for this is probably that the muscle is also low in lipids due to accumulation of these in other organs. Other migratory fishes such as tuna also have this adaptation, suggesting it is a convergent trait.
Rainbow Runner - Elagatis bipinnulata  Elagatis bipinnulata,Fish,Maldives,Rainbow Runner

Reproduction

The size at sexual maturity is only confidently known for the female of the species, being around 600 mm in fork length, although the male has been estimated to reach maturity at between 600 and 650 mm.
In the Atlantic, the species is known to spawn from spring through to early autumn, although fish living in waters greater than 27 degrees Celsius spawn year round.

However, even when year-round spawning occurs, there are seasonal peaks, with fish in the Western Pacific Ocean showing these peaks in May and in December – January.

The fish is oviparous, producing pelagic eggs and larvae. The larval stages have been studied in detail by Richards, with the diagnostic features of the larvae include a supraoccupital crest and distinctive patterns of pigment and melanophores. The growth of the fish has also been studied, with the size of fish at 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 years ages are estimated to be 30, 46, 59, 69 and 77 cm in length respectively. The migration pattern of juveniles is poorly known, with only a migration from equatorial spawning grounds to the coasts of Japan recorded, often floating in the currents under large mats of "Sargassum".

Food

Rainbow runner are fast swimming carnivores that take a wide range of prey including a wide variety of small fishes, cephalopods and pelagic or planktonic crustaceans including, shrimps and crabs.

It has been demonstrated that the species shows selectivity of its prey, with fish in the Pacific Ocean taking higher amounts of "Decapterus macarellus", a small fish, than any other prey available. It was also found in the same study that rainbow runner may increase the swimming and prey searching abilities rapidly with their growth, becoming more efficient at finding their preferred prey items.

Rainbow runner are also one of a number of pelagic fishes that prey on open-ocean species of sea-skaters, a type of insect which rest on the surface of the ocean.

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