Here’s the latest I can share about the camouflage grouper (Epinephelus polyphekadion) based on current public sources.
Core update
- The camouflage grouper is listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, with declines driven largely by overfishing, including targeted spawning aggregations in some regions. This status reflects global concerns and varies by location, with protections and management in place in several areas to safeguard spawning events and juvenile fish.[1][3]
Key points you might find useful
- Distribution: The species has a wide Indo-Pacific distribution, from the Red Sea and East Africa across the Indian Ocean to the Pacific, including northern Australia and French Polynesia (extending to southern Japan in the Pacific).[5]
- Reproduction and spawning: Camouflage groupers form spawning aggregations that are highly seasonal and predictable in many locales, often peaking within a short window once per year. This makes them particularly vulnerable to fishing pressure during spawning periods in areas where protections are not in place.[1]
- Conservation measures: Several regions have imposed protections around spawning sites or seasonal bans to reduce fishing pressure during aggregation periods. Examples include no-take protections near spawning sites in Palau, Pohnpei, and the Solomon Islands, and seasonal protections in places like Fiji. Some jurisdictions have size-based safeguards to ensure juveniles reach reproductive size before harvest.[1]
- Trade and population trends: Reports indicate that fish sizes in trade have been shrinking, with more juveniles entering the market in some areas, exacerbating population declines in places where spawning aggregations are heavily fished.[1]
Quick takeaways for planning or research
- If you’re monitoring or conserving camouflagé groupers, prioritize protecting spawning aggregation sites and enforcing size limits for juveniles. The effectiveness of these measures is highlighted across multiple regions.[1]
- For Asia-Pacific and Indian Ocean contexts, check local regulations around spawning seasons and protected areas, as protections can differ by country and island group.[1]
If you’d like, I can narrow this to a specific region (e.g., Palau, Fiji, or the Seychelles) and pull the most recent local regulations and any recent status changes. I can also summarize any recent research papers or fisheries reports you’re interested in. Please tell me which region or aspect you want prioritized.
Sources
camouflage Latest Breaking News, Pictures, Videos, and Special Reports from The Economic Times. camouflage Blogs, Comments and Archive News on Economictimes.com
economictimes.indiatimes.comThe seasonal and lunar timing of aggregation formation and spawning is highly predictable in specific locations but varies across the geographic range of the species, occurring just before new moon in Palau, Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea and the Seychelles, to just prior to the full moon in Pohnpei and Fiji. In most areas surveyed, aggregations form over 2-3 months, with peaks in abundance during just a single month each year. Variation occurs in arrival times between males and females,...
www.scrfa.orgFind the perfect camouflage grouper stock photo, image, vector, illustration or 360 image. Available for both RF and RM licensing.
www.alamy.comThe cool harlequin filefish masquerades as coral to hide in plain sight while it is sleeping. It has special coloring, behavior and physical adaptations which allow it to blend in with the coral.
www.livescience.comLearn Camouflage grouper facts for kids
kids.kiddle.coGiant groupers of all varieties busied the Living Oceans Foundation Global Reef Expedition BIOT science team in the remote coral reefs of Chagos Archipelago
www.livingoceansfoundation.orgBlue Ocean Dive Centers & Resorts Marsa Alam Diving
www.blueocean-eg.com