Lined Monocle Bream
Scolopsis lineata
Lined Monocle Bream (Scolopsis lineata) is a tropical Indo-Pacific monocle bream found on sandy and rubble bottoms near reefs. It is a small, reef-associated species that feeds close to the seabed and is usually an incidental catch rather than a primary target.

Identification points
- Longitudinal yellowish or dark lines running along the silvery body
- A distinct dark mark/spot near the upper gill cover and eye region typical of monocle breams
- Slender, laterally compressed body with a small mouth and forked tail
Habitat
Shallow tropical marine waters over sand, coral rubble, and seagrass adjacent to reefs, typically from nearshore flats to outer reef slopes and lagoon margins.
Bait notes
Small pieces of shrimp, squid, cut fish, and marine worms work well. Tiny soft plastics and small bottom-bounced jigs can also take fish when they are feeding near reef edges.
Behavior
Often travels in small schools or loose aggregations and picks benthic prey from the bottom. It forages on worms, small crustaceans, and other invertebrates, staying close to cover and moving quickly when spooked.
Caution
A marine reef fish species; no major species-specific hazard is well documented, but standard tropical reef-fish consumption caution applies if harvested from ciguatera-prone areas.
Fishing notes
Fish light tackle close to the bottom with short casts along sand-rubble seams, reef drop-offs, and lagoon edges. A small running sinker rig or subtle jig presentation is usually better than fast retrieves; this is generally a bycatch species.