Whitecheek surgeonfish
(Acanthurus nigricans)

General data

Scientific names: Whitecheek surgeonfish
Local names: Goldrim surgeonfish, Velvet surgeon, Yellow-banded surgeonfish, Yellowrimmed surgeonfish
Habitat: Saltwater
Climates: Tropical, Subtropical
Distribution: Pacific Ocean, Indian ocean

Acanthurus nigricans has a body which is shaped like an elongated oval, with a steep dorsal profile to the head and an eye positioned high on the head. It has a small protrusible mouth with between 8 and 28 small teeth on the jaws which have flattened, notched tips.

The dorsal fin is supported by 9 spines and between 28 and 31 soft rays while the anal fin contains 3 spines and 26 to 28 soft rays.

The overall colour is bluish-black or black broken by a large patch of white below the eye. There is a yellow band at the base of both the dorsal and anal fins and this widens as it approaches the caudal fin. The caudal peduncle has a patch of yellow around the spine and its sheath. The caudal fin is white with a slender yellow submarginal band.

 This species has a maximum published fork length of 36 cm (14 in).

Acanthrus nigricans is found as far east as the Chagos Islands in the British Indian Ocean Territory in the central Indian Ocean, Christams Island and the Cocos (Keeling) Islands in the eastern Indian Ocean.

In the Pacific Ocena it is more widespread and is found from the Ryukyu Islands of southern Japan south to the Great Barrier Reef and east across the Pacific to the eastern coasts of Central and South American between the Gulf of California and Ecuador.

It is a benthopelagic fish with the adults being found at depths from the surface down to 67 m (220 ft) over hard substrates in clear waters in lagoons and over seaward reefs. The juveniles hide among large corals.

Log in to see the catches.