Redband Parrotfish
Sparisoma aurofrenatum
Redband Parrotfish is a Caribbean reef parrotfish noted for a reddish band on the head and a beaklike mouth used to scrape algae from hard bottom. It is common on shallow reefs and seagrass edges, and is not usually targeted as a major game fish.

Identification points
- Distinct reddish-orange band across the upper head/forehead area
- Greenish to bluish body with a pale underside
- Parrotlike fused teeth forming a blunt beak and a rounded tail
Habitat
Shallow coral reefs, reef flats, rocky bottoms, and nearby seagrass beds in the western Atlantic and Caribbean, usually close to structure where algal growth is available.
Bait notes
Not a standard target species. Small natural baits such as pieces of shrimp, crab, or worm may take one opportunistically; tiny reef jigs or algae-colored soft plastics can also draw strikes.
Behavior
Primarily grazes algae from rock and coral surfaces by day, often in small loose groups; like other parrotfish it can be wary, stays near cover, and roosts in crevices at night.
Caution
Hard beaklike jaws and abrasive mouthparts can damage hooks; use care handling around sharp reef structure. In some Caribbean locations parrotfish are managed or protected, so check local rules before keeping any.
Fishing notes
Light tackle around shallow reef structure is key; present baits tight to the bottom and near coral heads or rubble. Because it feeds by scraping rather than chasing, slow presentations and natural drift work better than fast retrieves.