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Carangoides gymnostethus : ウィキペディア英語版
Bludger (fish)

The bludger, ''Carangoides gymnostethus'' (also known as the bludger trevally, nakedbreast trevally and Bleeker’s jackfish), is a widespread species of large marine fish in the jack family, Carangidae. The bludger inhabits the tropical and subtropical regions of the Indo-west Pacific Ocean, distributed from South Africa in the west to Japan and New Caledonia in the east. It is a large fish, growing to a maximum recorded length of 90 cm, and is very similar to the yellowspotted trevally, ''Carangoides fulvoguttatus'', but can be separated by the complete absence of breast scales and a number of other anatomical features. The species inhabits moderately deep offshore coral and rocky reefs, where it preys on small crustaceans and fish. The reproductive biology of the species is poorly known, but it appears to move to more tropical waters to spawn. The bludger is of intermediate importance to fisheries throughout its range, taken by hook and line and various netting methods. It is of some value to anglers also, considered a good gamefish, but generally regarded as poor eating due to its soft oily flesh, which is used as bait by many anglers. The name ‘bludger’ is said to either refer to the blunt head of the species, or the destination of the fish when caught by professional fishermen who treat the fish as discard.
==Taxonomy and naming==
The bludger is classified within the genus ''Carangoides'', a group of fish commonly known as jacks and trevallies. Carangoides falls into the jack and horse mackerel family Carangidae, itself part the order Perciformes, in the suborder Percoidei.
The species was first scientifically described by the famed French naturalist Georges Cuvier in 1833 based on the holotype specimen taken in the Seychelles. Cuvier named his species ''Caranx gymnostethus'', with the specific epithet meaning 'naked breast' in reference to its scaleless breast. The species was later reassigned to the genus ''Carangoides'', where it has remained since. In 1851, Pieter Bleeker named what he believed to be a new species ''Carangoides gymnostethoides'', which literally translates as 'like ''Carangoides gymnostethus, indicating its similarity to the bludger. This was later found to be the same as ''Carangoides gymnostethus'' and became a junior synonym.
Confusion with ''Carangoides orthogrammus'' in Hawaiian waters led John Nichols to propose subspecies of ''Carangoides gymnostethoides'' due to slight anatomical differences. These taxa possibly represent misidentified ''C. orthogrammus'', although Nichols meticulous distinction of the species may indicate a population of the species may exist in Hawaii,〔 although these subspecies have largely been ignored by taxonomic authorities and remained unresolved. The species has the unusual common name of 'bludger', which is said to have arisen by one of two ways; either due to the blunt shape of the species snout or a description of the eventual destination of the fish when caught by professional fishermen seeking more desirable catches. In both cases, the word 'bludger' refers to an object used to bludgeon.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Bludger (fish)」の詳細全文を読む



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