Devil Scorpionfish
Scorpaenopsis diabolus
Devil Scorpionfish (Scorpaenopsis diabolus) is a venomous ambush predator of shallow Indo-Pacific reefs and rubble, famously cryptic and hard to spot. It rests motionless on the bottom and strikes small fish and crustaceans at close range.

Identification points
- Heavily mottled brown, reddish, or gray body with irregular leaf-like blotches for camouflage
- Large, warty head with prominent ridges and a broad, scorpionfish-like profile
- Very large fan-shaped pectoral fins and stout venomous spines along the dorsal fin
Habitat
Shallow tropical marine reefs, coral heads, rubble slopes, lagoon bottoms, and sand patches adjacent to structure; usually resting on or partly buried in the substrate from very shallow water to around 30 m.
Bait notes
Rarely targeted on purpose. Small pieces of shrimp, squid, or baitfish can take it incidentally on bottom rigs, but most anglers should avoid handling or trying to catch one.
Behavior
A sedentary nocturnal ambush feeder that relies on camouflage; it waits on the bottom and lunges at passing shrimp, crabs, and small fishes. It is not a target gamefish and is usually encountered incidentally by divers or bottom anglers.
Caution
Highly venomous dorsal, anal, and pelvic spines can inflict severe pain and swelling; handle only with puncture-resistant tools. Do not consume from areas with ciguatera risk unless local guidance says it is safe.
Fishing notes
If caught, keep the fish in the water and release with tools, not hands. Use caution around rocky reef and rubble where it blends in; it can be hooked on small baited hooks fished near bottom but is not a sport target.