font settings and languages

Font Size: Large | Normal | Small
Font Face: Verdana | Geneva | Georgia
Languages:

Euleptorhamphus viridis

(Flying Halfbeak, Garfish, Long-Finned Garfish, Longbeaked Garfish, Ribbon Halfbeak)

Overview

[ Back to top ]

Family : Halfbeaks ; Usually oceanic but enters large open bays (Ref. 2850). Found around islands (Ref. 9306). Capable of jumping out of the water and gliding above the surface (Ref. 9306).

Common Names

[ Back to top ]

Click on the language to view common names.

Common Names in Afrikaans:

Lint-Halfbek

Common Names in Carolinian:

Mwaag

Common Names in English:

Flying Halfbeak, Garfish, Long-Finned Garfish, Longbeaked Garfish, Ribbon Halfbeak

Common Names in French:

Demi-Bec Allongé

Common Names in Japanese:

Tô-Zayori

Common Names in Mandarin Chinese:

長吻鱵, 長鱵

Common Names in Misima-Paneati:

Leu Sula

Common Names in Portuguese:

Meia-Agulha De Fita

Common Names in Russian:

полурыл длиннорылый

Common Names in Samoan:

I´usila, I'usila

Common Names in Spanish:

Agujeta Alargada, Pajarito, Silió

Common Names in Surigaonon:

Sasa, Suasid

Common Names in Tagalog:

Buging, Kansusuwit, Lulungi

Common Names in Tahitian:

A´u, A'u

Common Names in Vietnamese:

Cá Kìm Hàm Dài

Common Names in Visayan:

Bamban, Buloy, Obud-Obud, Sugi

Description

[ Back to top ]

Family Hemiramphidae

Halfbeaks are known from the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans. The lower jaw much longer than upper jaw; premaxillae pointed anteriorly; short pectoral and pelvic fins. Vertebrae 38-75 (except 18-25 in Arrhamphus). About 45 cm maximum length . Eggs are attached to algae in shallow waters; viviparity in Dermogenys, Nomorphamphus, and Hemirhamphodon. Surface dwelling omnivores of algae, zooplankton and fishes . CLOFFSCA: The Hemiramphidae, the halfbeaks, are one of five families of the order Beloniformes. They are the sister-group of the Exocoetidae, the flying fishes, forming the superfamily Exocoetoidea (Collette et al. , 1984). Most halfbeaks have an elongate lower jaw that distinguishes them from flying fishes which have lost the elongate lower jaw and from needlefishes (Belonidae) and sauries (Scomberesocidae) which have both jaws elongate. The family is defined by one derived character, third pair of upper pharyngeal bones anklylosed into a plate . Other diagnostic characters include: pectoral fins short or moderately long; premaxillae pointed anteriorly, forming a triangular upper jaw (except in Oxyporhamphus); lower jaw elongate in juveniles of all genera, adults of most genera; parapophyses forked ; swimbladder not extending into haemal canal ; nostrils in a pit anterior to the eyes; no spines in fins ; dorsal and anal fins posterior in position; pelvic fins in abdominal position, with 6 soft rays ; lateral line running down from pectoral fin origin and then backward along ventral margin of body. Scales moderately large, cycloid, easily detached. Color. These fishes live at the surface and are protectively colored for this mode of life being green or blue on the back and silvery white on the sides and ventrally. Tip of the lower jaw bright red or orange in life in most species. Most species are marine , but some inhabit freshwaters ; omnivorous , feeding on floating sea grasses, crustaceans and small fishes. They are prone to leap and skitter at the surface and one offshore species, Euleptorhamphus velox can leap out of the water and glide like a flying fish. The flesh is excellent and larger species of halfbeaks are utilized as food in many parts of the world. In the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea, they are more important as baitfish for billfishes , dolphins , kingfish , wahoo, and king mackerel than as food fish . They are caught with seines or dipnetted under lights at night. The Hemiramphidae contains 12 genera and over 100 species (Collette, in press .) Four genera, the first three monotypic (Arrhamphus, Chriodorus, Melapedalion, and Oxyporhampus) have very short or no beaks. Euleptorhamphus and Oxyporhamphus contain two offshore species each. The subfamily Zenarchopterinae contains five genera and about 50 sexually dimorphic internally-fertilizing Indo-West Pacific estuarine or freshwater species (Meisner and Collette, 1999). Three of these genera (Dermogenys, Hemirhamphodon, and Nomorhamphus) are viviparous and have the anal fin of the male modified into an andropodium . Hemiramphus (with 10 species) is a world wide marine genus. Rhynchorhamphus (with 4 species) has fimbriate nasal papillae and is confined to Indo-West Pacific marine waters. Hyporhamphus, the most speciose genus, includes two subgenera , Hyporhamphus with 23 species and Reporhamphus with 11 species, all confined to the Indo-West Pacific. Some species are marine, some estuarine, and some freshwater. All genera are characterized by particular lateral line characters (Parin and Astakhov, 1982). The halfbeak fauna of the western Atlantic includes nine marine species in five genera (Collette, in press), Chriodorus (1 species), Euleptorhamphus (1), Oxyporhamphus (1), Hemiramphus (3), and Hyporhamphus (3), plus two freshwater species of Hyporhamphus in rivers draining into the western Atlantic.The family Hemiramphidae belongs to the Class Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes) and the Order Beloniformes. It contains 12 genera and 85 species. It may be found in Marine, Brackish , and Freshwater environments and is primarily Marine. Some members of this family are used in the aquarium trade. Reproductively, most members of this family are mixed. The main mode of swimming of adult fish in this family is carangiform . Compared with other fish, the activity level of this family tends to be active . Members of this family have been dated back to the Eocene epoch of the Tertiary period. This family may be found from 55° n to 40° s and 120° w to 154° e. Etymology of this family name : Greek, hemi = half + Greek, rhamphos = beak, bill

Habitat

Typically found in water with a depth of 0 to -4,192 meters (0 to -13,753 feet).Mean = -977.520 meters (-3,207.087 feet), Standard Deviation = 1,322.840 based on 58 observations. Ocean depth information for each observation from British Oceanographic Data Centre.

Biome: Saltwater . Pelagic .

Taxonomy

[ Back to top ]

Unambiguous Synonyms

  1. Euleptorhamphus brevoortii Gill, 1959
  2. Euleptorhamphus longirostris (Cuvier, 1829)
  3. Hemiramphus longirostris Cuvier, 1829
  4. Hemiramphus macrorhynchus Valenciennes, 1847
  5. Hemiramphus tweediei Herre, 1936
  6. Hemiramphus viridis van Hasselt, 1823
  7. Hemirhamphus elongatus Tanaka, 1911
  8. Hemirhamphus longirostris Cuvier, 1829
  9. Hemirhamphus viridis van Hasselt, 1823

Notes

Name Status: Accepted Name .

Similar Species

[ Back to top ]

Members of the genus Euleptorhamphus

There are approximately 4 species in this genus:

Hyporhamphus regularis subsp. ardelio · E. peronides · E. velox (Flying Halfbeak) · E. viridis (Flying Halfbeak)

Bibliography

[ Back to top ]

More Info

[ Back to top ]

Notes

[ Back to top ]

Contributors

Data Sources

Accessed through GBIF Data Portal November 15, 2007:

Identifiers

Footnotes

Last Revised: 2008-07-22