Steephead Parrotfish
Chlorurus microrhinos
Steephead Parrotfish (Chlorurus microrhinos) is a large Indo-Pacific reef parrotfish known for its steep forehead in terminal males and strong beak-like teeth. It grazes hard on reef surfaces and rubble, helping create sand from coral and algae.

Identification points
- Large, steeply sloped forehead in terminal males
- Beak-like fused teeth with thick lips
- Blue-green body with pink/orange markings and a large, robust profile
Habitat
Coral reefs, outer reef slopes, lagoon patch reefs, and reef crests across the Indo-Pacific; adults often patrol exposed reef flats and surge zones where algal turf and coral substrata are abundant.
Bait notes
Not a common target species; if taken, it will sometimes take cut natural baits like shrimp, pieces of squid, or shellfish near reef structure. Small reef jigs or soft plastics worked close to the bottom may get exploratory bites, but it is primarily an incidental catch.
Behavior
A daytime herbivore/detritivore that scrapes algae and living reef substrate with fused teeth, often in small groups or as solitary large fish. Large males are territorial and may switch from drab initial-phase coloration to vivid green-blue terminal phase.
Caution
Reef-associated fish can pose ciguatera risk in some tropical areas, especially larger individuals; local advisories matter. Use caution around sharp coral and strong reef currents.
Fishing notes
Fish around reef edges, bommies, and drop-offs with light to medium reef tackle and abrasion-resistant leader. Present bait naturally and keep clear of coral to avoid snagging; release carefully because large parrotfish are important reef grazers.