Black Grouper
Mycteroperca bonaci
Black grouper is a large, reef-associated serranid found on rocky ledges, coral reefs, and wrecks in warm Atlantic waters. It is an ambush predator that feeds on fish and crustaceans and is prized by anglers where regulations allow harvest.

Identification points
- Dark brown to nearly black body with irregular pale mottling that may look faint or absent underwater
- Three prominent dark bars on the head, especially a diagonal band through the eye and two cheek bars
- Large mouth and thick body with rounded tail typical of a heavy reef grouper
Habitat
Adults inhabit deep coral and rocky reefs, ledges, drop-offs, and wrecks, often staying near structure from shallow water to well over 100 m; juveniles use seagrass beds and shallow patch reefs.
Bait notes
Live pinfish, grunts, herring, ballyhoo, squid, and cut fish are effective. Large jigs and deep-diving or bottom-oriented artificials also work when fished near structure.
Behavior
A solitary ambush predator, black grouper waits tight to cover and surges out to strike reef fish, squid, and crabs. It is most active around current breaks and can be wary after pressure.
Caution
Check local size, bag, and seasonal rules, as black grouper are regulated in many areas. Larger reef fish may carry ciguatera risk in some regions; avoid consuming very large fish from known risk areas.
Fishing notes
Fish heavy tackle close to reefs, wrecks, and ledges, using live bait on strong leaders and enough drag to turn the fish before it reaches cover. Vertical jigging and slow bottom drifting over structure can produce bites.