Animalia > Chordata > Perciformes > Carangidae > Carangoides

Carangoides (island jacks)

Synonyms:

Wikipedia Abstract

Carangoides is a genus of tropical to subtropical marine fishes in the jack family, Carangidae. They are small- to large-sized, deep-bodied fish characterised by a certain gill raker and jaw morphology, often appearing very similar to jacks in the genus Caranx. They inhabit the subtropical and tropical regions of the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic Oceans, often occupying coastal areas, including reefs, bays, and estuaries, rarely venturing far offshore. They are all predatory fishes, taking a variety of smaller fishes, crustaceans and cephalopods as prey. The genus was first erected in 1851 by Pieter Bleeker for an unknown taxon and currently contains 21 species. Many make up significant proportions of various fisheries, although a number of ciguatera cases have been attributed to them.
View Wikipedia Record: Carangoides

Species

Carangoides armatus (Round trevally)
Carangoides aureoguttatus
Carangoides bajad (Orange-spotted trevally)
Carangoides bartholomaei (Yellowjack)
Carangoides chrysophrys (Long-nose trevally)
Carangoides ciliarius (Longfin cavalla)
Carangoides coeruleopinnatus (Coastal trevally)
Carangoides dinema (Aldabra trevally)
Carangoides equula (Whitefin trevally)
Carangoides ferdau (Yellow spotted trevally)
Carangoides fulvoguttatus (Yellow-spotted trevally)
Carangoides gibber
Carangoides gymnostethus (Trevally)
Carangoides hedlandensis (Port Hedland trevally)
Carangoides humerosus (Epaulette trevally)
Carangoides malabaricus (White-spot trevally) (Attributes)
Carangoides oblongus (Oblong trevally)
Carangoides orthogrammus (Yellow-spotted trevally) (Attributes)
Carangoides otrynter (Threadfin jack) (Attributes)
Carangoides plagiotaenia (Barcheek kingfish)
Carangoides praeustus (Brown-backed trevally) (Attributes)
Carangoides talamparoides (Coastal trevally)

External References

Species taxanomy provided by GBIF Secretariat (2022). GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/39omei accessed via GBIF.org on 2023-06-13; License: CC BY 4.0