Lagodon rhomboides

Lagodon rhomboides - Pinfish

Habitat Adult pinfish prefer waters between 30-50 feet deep, whereas juveniles are more common where there is some cover such as in seagrass beds, rocky bottoms, jetties, mangroves, etc. They prefer higher salinity water.

Range The pinfish is found in Bermuda and along the United States Coast from Massachusetts to Texas, and down along the Mexican Gulf Coast. It is also found along the northern Yucatán Coast and near some northern Caribbean islands, but it is less common in these tropical portions.

Description Pinfish are a saltwater fish of the Sparidae family. Other common names include pin perch, sand perch, and butterfish. The pinfish is a small fish, growing only to about 4.5 in (11.4 cm). Both the male and the female have a silvery sheen with five to six vertical bars on the side. They have olive backs with yellow and white pigmentation as well as a blue, green, and purple iridescence. The anterior dorsal fin has 12 rigid, spiny rays capable of puncturing human skin, which gives the species its common name, pinfish.

Ecological Notes Pinfish change their diet throughout their life history. Juvenile pinfish are carnivorous and primarily eat shrimp, fish eggs, insect larvae, polychaete worms, and amphipods. As pinfish become older and larger, they become more herbivorous, with plant matter comprising up to 90% of their diet. The pinfish is prey for alligator gar, longnose gar, ladyfish, spotted sea trout, red drum, southern flounder, pelicans, and bottlenose dolphins.

Sexual maturity is reached at about one year and spawning season is in the fall and winter. Eggs are broadcast in the water by the female, and then fertilized by the male. Because this species is eaten by many other animals, its life span is generally short. The pinfish are not generally sought as sport or food in the United States due to its small size and numerous small bones. It is used as live bait and is generally considered a nuisance bait-stealer.

Personal Information I spotted a pinfish on our boat ride at CSI. We went trawling and caught a couple small fish, this guy (pictured above) being one of them. I found their spiny rays and iridescence to be quite intriguing, making them an interesting and "pretty" fish to look at.

References

Add references used Pinfish Information

Additional Information

Stoner, A. W. (1982). The influence of benthic macrophytes on the foraging behavior of pinfish, Lagodon rhomboids (Linnaeus). Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 58, 271-284.

This paper studied the influence of macrophytes on the foraging behavior of pinfish. They found that the number of amphipods consumed by juvenile pinfish decreased significantly with increasing seagrass biomass, but differences occurred among various macrophyte species. It was found that the choice of amphipod prey by pinfish was a function of seagrass biomass, fish size, and prey density, and turned out to be independent of macrophyte species.

Jordan, F., Bartolini, M., Nelson, C., Patterson, P. E., & Soulen, H. L. (1997). Risk of predation affects habitat selection by the pinfish< i> Lagodon rhomboides(Linnaeus). Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 208(1), 45-56.

The authors of this paper examined trawl catches from adjacent seagrass beds and sand flats within Turkey Point Shoal, a shallow estuary in the northern Gulf of Mexico. They found that fish abundance in seagrass beds was significantly higher than in sand flats and that it was primarily due to the pinfish.

Contributed by Meredith Liedtke - 2014

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