Spotted Parrotfish
Cetoscarus ocellatus
The Spotted Parrotfish (Cetoscarus ocellatus) is a reef-dwelling parrotfish of the Indo-Pacific, often seen grazing on coral and algae around shallow tropical reefs. It is not a typical target for anglers and is more important ecologically than as a sport fish.

Identification points
- Blue-green body with prominent pale spots on the sides in adults
- Fused parrot-like beak formed by the teeth
- Robust, oval body with a continuous dorsal profile typical of large parrotfish
Habitat
Shallow tropical coral reefs, reef flats, lagoons, and seaward reef slopes, usually over hard bottom with abundant algal growth; adults often use coral-rich reef habitat while juveniles shelter in more protected reef areas.
Bait notes
Not a common or recommended angling target. If incidentally hooked on reefs, it may take small crustacean bits, algae scrapings, or tiny reef-fish baits, but capture is usually accidental rather than purposeful.
Behavior
Daytime grazer that scrapes algae and associated growth from coral and rocks with fused beak-like teeth; generally wary, commonly travels singly or in loose groups, and may retreat to shelter at night.
Caution
Handle carefully: parrotfish have a strong beak and can injure fingers. Local rules may restrict harvest on reef fish, and some parrotfish species can carry ciguatera risk in tropical areas; check local regulations before keeping any.
Fishing notes
Best avoided as a target species because it is reef-dependent and ecologically important. In places where parrotfish are legally caught, very small hooks and light reef tackle may hook them incidentally around reef edges, but release quickly to reduce stress.