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The common scat is [[omnivorous]] and an indiscriminate eater. In 1992, biologists Barry and Fast reported adult scat from the Philippines were primarily [[herbivorous]], while the juveniles preferred zooplankton. Although scat were named for their purported habit of feeding on offal (''Scatophagus argus'' is translated from Greek to "spotted feces-eater"), it may be a misnomer as this behaviour has not been confirmed in diet studies.<ref name="autogenerated1"/>
The common scat is [[omnivorous]] and an indiscriminate eater. In 1992, biologists Barry and Fast reported adult scat from the Philippines were primarily [[herbivorous]], while the juveniles preferred zooplankton. Although scat were named for their purported habit of feeding on offal (''Scatophagus argus'' is translated from Greek to "spotted feces-eater"), it may be a misnomer as this behaviour has not been confirmed in diet studies.<ref name="autogenerated1"/>
==As a food source==
==As a food source==
''Scatophagus argus'' is fished for and eaten by some people from its original environment, and can sting with small spikes in its anterior parts, inflicting a venom that causes great pain and dizzyness. Treatment of the wound is often done by soaking the infliction in hot water.<ref>{{cite journal |author= Gisha Sivan|coauthors= K. Venketesvaran, C.K. Radhakrishnan |date=15 September 2007|title= Biological and biochemical properties of Scatophagus argus venom |journal= Toxicon |volume= 50 |issue= 4 |pages= 563–571 |publisher= Elsevier Ltd |doi= 10.1016/j.toxicon.2007.05.002 |pmid= 17599379}}</ref>
''Scatophagus argus'' is fished for and eaten by some people from its original environment, and can sting with small spikes in its anterior parts, inflicting a venom that causes great pain and dizzyness. Treatment of the wound is often done by soaking the infliction in hot water.<ref>{{cite journal |author= Gisha Sivan |author2=K. Venketesvaran |author3=C.K. Radhakrishnan |date=15 September 2007|title= Biological and biochemical properties of Scatophagus argus venom |journal= Toxicon |volume= 50 |issue= 4 |pages= 563–571 |publisher= Elsevier Ltd |doi= 10.1016/j.toxicon.2007.05.002 |pmid= 17599379}}</ref>


{{Commons category|Scatophagus argus}}
{{Commons category|Scatophagus argus}}

Revision as of 14:15, 17 July 2015

Spotted Scat
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
S. argus
Binomial name
Scatophagus argus
(Linnaeus, 1766)
Synonyms

Cacodoxus argus
Chaetodon argus
Chaetodon atromaculatus
Ephippus argus
Scatophagus argus argus
Scatophagus argus atromaculatus

Scatophagus argus, a fish in the scat family (Scatophagidae), occurs in two basic color morphs which are called green scat and ruby or red scat. As a whole, the species is called common or spotted scat. This fish is generally distributed around the Indo-Pacific region, to Japan, New Guinea, and southeastern Australia. They live in coastal muddy areas, including estuaries, mangroves, harbours, and the lower courses of rivers.[1] They are popular aquarium fish.

Description

The body is strongly compressed. The dorsal head profile is steep, with a rounded snout. The body is greenish-brown to silvery with many brown to red-brown spots. Spines and rays of the dorsal fin are separated by a deep notch. Small ctenoid scales cover the body. Juveniles are a greenish-brown with either a few large, dark, rounded blotches, or five or six dark, vertical bars.[1]


Since S. argus can live in embayment regions, as well as quite far upstream in freshwater rivers, they can adapt to varying salinities. As fry, they live in freshwater environments, but as they mature, they move to saltwater environments. They do not live in temperate waters, as they require at least a little warmth (21 to 28°C). [2]


The common scat is omnivorous and an indiscriminate eater. In 1992, biologists Barry and Fast reported adult scat from the Philippines were primarily herbivorous, while the juveniles preferred zooplankton. Although scat were named for their purported habit of feeding on offal (Scatophagus argus is translated from Greek to "spotted feces-eater"), it may be a misnomer as this behaviour has not been confirmed in diet studies.[1]

As a food source

Scatophagus argus is fished for and eaten by some people from its original environment, and can sting with small spikes in its anterior parts, inflicting a venom that causes great pain and dizzyness. Treatment of the wound is often done by soaking the infliction in hot water.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c "scat (Scatophagus argus) - FactSheet". Nas.er.usgs.gov. Retrieved 2014-07-13.
  2. ^ "Scatophagus argus". Aquaticcommunity.com. Retrieved 2014-07-13.
  3. ^ Gisha Sivan; K. Venketesvaran; C.K. Radhakrishnan (15 September 2007). "Biological and biochemical properties of Scatophagus argus venom". Toxicon. 50 (4). Elsevier Ltd: 563–571. doi:10.1016/j.toxicon.2007.05.002. PMID 17599379.