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Dusky Rabbitfish

Siganus fuscescens

Dusky Rabbitfish (Siganus fuscescens) is a venomous spine-equipped rabbitfish of shallow coastal Indo-Pacific waters. It grazes mainly on algae over reefs, seagrass beds, and sheltered bays, and can form schools in warm nearshore areas.

Freshwater
Dusky Rabbitfish reference image
Ishizaki Yūshi, public-domain, via Wikimedia Commons. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

Identification points

  • Oval, laterally compressed body with a small rabbitfish-like mouth
  • Dusky brown to olive coloration, often mottled or blotched rather than brightly patterned
  • Prominent sharp dorsal and anal spines with a long continuous soft fin profile

Habitat

Shallow coastal reefs, coral and rocky reef flats, seagrass beds, mangrove margins, harbors, and sheltered bays; most common around algal growth in warm, clear to slightly turbid water.

Bait notes

Not a major target sport fish in many areas. If hooked, it will take small algae-imitating soft plastics, dough baits, bread, seaweed, or bits of shrimp; small hooks and light baits work best.

Behavior

Primarily diurnal and herbivorous, browsing filamentous algae and turf algae; often schools in open shallow water or along reef edges, especially over weedy structure and tide-swept flats.

Caution

Venomous fin spines can inflict a painful sting; use pliers and avoid handling the dorsal/anal spines. In some regions rabbitfish are eaten, but always follow local advisories and size/season rules.

Fishing notes

Fish quietly near weed-covered reefs, jetties, and seagrass edges with light tackle and small hooks; present bait naturally near the bottom or midwater. Handle carefully because the dorsal, anal, and pelvic spines can sting.