Blacktip Grouper
Epinephelus fasciatus
Blacktip Grouper (Epinephelus fasciatus) is a small serranid reef fish found on tropical and subtropical rocky and coral reefs. It is an ambush predator that shelters in crevices by day and feeds on small fishes and crustaceans, especially around steep reef drop-offs and rubble.

Identification points
- Dark red to brown body with many small pale blue or white spots
- Noticeable black-edged spiny dorsal fin and darker fin margins
- Compact grouper shape with a somewhat pointed head and large mouth
Habitat
Lives on coral and rocky reefs, reef slopes, drop-offs, and adjacent rubble or ledges from shallow water to deeper outer-reef habitat; often close to shelter in caves and crevices.
Bait notes
Small live reef fish, squid strips, shrimp, and cut bait all work. On lures, use compact jigs, soft plastics, or small baitfish profiles fished close to bottom and tight to structure.
Behavior
A solitary ambush predator that waits motionless near cover, then darts out to take small reef fishes, shrimp, and crabs. It is more active at dusk and night and often holds tight to structure.
Caution
Like other reef groupers, local consumption advisories may apply because larger individuals can accumulate ciguatera toxins in some areas. It also has sharp gill plates and strong reef-covering behavior that can cause tackle break-offs.
Fishing notes
Fish heavy enough tackle to pull it away from reef cover. Present baits vertically or on a short leader near ledges, holes, and drop-offs; short, accurate drops and quick hooksets matter.