Sabre Squirrelfish
Sargocentron spiniferum
Sabre Squirrelfish is a nocturnal reef fish with a very large eye and long, sharp preopercular spines. It hides by day in caves and crevices and comes out at night to feed on small crustaceans and fishes.

Identification points
- Deep red to orange-red body with pale horizontal stripes
- Very large eye adapted for ночurnal activity
- Long, sharp preopercular spines on the cheek/gill-cover area
Habitat
Steep coral and rocky reef slopes, outer reef drop-offs, caves, ledges, and deep crevices; usually sheltering by day in shaded holes and foraging at night from shallow reefs to deeper offshore reefs.
Bait notes
Takes small fish strips, squid, shrimp, and cut bait fished near reef holes; small jigs or glowing/bright lures worked slowly at night can also draw strikes.
Behavior
Primarily nocturnal and solitary or loosely grouped; rests in dark refuges during daylight and emerges after dusk to pick crustaceans and small fishes off the reef, often holding close to structure.
Caution
Handle carefully: the gill cover/preopercular spines are sharp and can puncture skin. As a reef predator, it may carry ciguatera risk in some tropical areas; check local advisories before eating.
Fishing notes
Fish after dark around reef edges, caves, and overhangs with light tackle and a quiet presentation; let bait sink close to structure and be ready for quick runs into cover. Usually not a targeted game fish.