Banjos banjos

The Banjo fish ( banjo banjos ) is a bass related fish that lives in the western Pacific. Its range extends from the coast of Korea, the southern Japan, China and the East China Sea. Reports of deposits are also from Indonesia and the Chesterfield Islands in the South Pacific.

Features

Banjo fish are 20 to 30 inches long. Your body is high backs and sides strongly flattened, the head profile is steep and nearly straight. The gill cover is without a sting. The body color is gray-brown or olive color. On the flanks show eight faint dark longitudinal bands. The unpaired fins have a white border, the weichstrahlige part of the dorsal fin shows a black spot.

The dorsal fin is supported by ten spines and eleven soft rays. The anal fin has three spines and seven soft rays. The third sting of the dorsal fin and the second of the anal fin are specially designed long and strong. The pelvic fins put on behind the pectoral fin base. The caudal fin is slightly emarginate. The lateral line organ is fully developed.

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