Geelbeck croaker
The geelbeck croaker, also known as the African weakfish or Cape salmon, is a species of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the family Sciaenidae, the drums and croakers. This species is found in the southwestern Indian Ocean off southeastern Africa.
Taxonomy
The geelbeck croaker was first formally described as Otolithus aequidens in 1830 by the French zoologist Georges Cuvier with its type locality given as False Bay in the Western Cape. In 1862 Theodore Gill classified O. aequidens in a new monospecific genus Atractoscion and designated it as the type species of that genus. Previously it was considered that this species had a wide distribution in the southeastern Atlantic and Indo-West Pacific but in 2017 workers described two new species and resurrected A. atelodus from the western Pacific, restricting this species to the southwestern Indian Ocean. This species is classified in the family Sciaenidae which is placed within the suborder Sciaenoidei of the order Acanthuriformes in the 5th edition of Fishes of the World. The specific name aequidens means "equal teeth", alluding to the similar sized teeth and lack of canines.Description
The geelbeck croaker has 9 spines in the front part of the dorsal fin separated from the rear part by an incision and a single spine and 27 or 28 soft rays behind the incision. The anal fin is supported by 2 spines and 9 or 10 soft rays. There are between 16 and 18 fin rays in the pectoral fin. Its body has a standard length which is equivalent to 4.5 to 5.2 times its depth. All of the teeth in the mouth can be depressed. The colour of the body is iridescent blue and purple with bright yellow on the edges of jaws and the insideof the operculum. There is a blotch on the axil of the pectoral-fin. This species has a maximum published total length of, although is more typical, and a maximum published weight of.