Scientific Name
Liopropoma susumi  
Pronounce  
Liopropoma susumi孫氏長鱸
by: Lab of Fish Ecol. and Evo., BRCAS
Author (Jordan & Seale, 1906) Depth 2 - 34M
Chinese 孫氏長鱸 Poisonous Fish No 
Family_Chinese 鮨科 Economic Fish No 
Family F338 Serranidae Edible Fish Yes  Chinese In Mainland China 孫氏長鱸 
Max Length 9 cm  Aquarium Fish No  Common Name 鱠仔 
Distribution in World India Ocean to Pacific Ocean   Distribution in Taiwan South、PonFu、LanI Is. 
Habitats Coral、Coastal、Lagoon  Holotype Locality Apia, Samoa 
Synonyms Chorististium susumi, Flagelloserranus meteori, Liopoproma susumi, Ypsigramma brocki, Ypsigramma lineata, Ypsigramma susumi   
Reference 臺灣魚類誌(沈等, 1993);Fishes of Japan(Nakabo, 2002)  Jordan, D. S. etc. 1906 Randall, J. E. etc. 1988 沈世傑 編 Shih-Chieh Shen ed. 1993 Nakabo T. 2002 Nakabo T. 2002 
Specimen List ASIZP0055550. ASIZP0056532. ASIZP0058126. ASIZP0063373. ASIZP0916860. ASIZP0916861. ASIZP0916862. ASIZP0916863. ASIZP0916925. BPBMI23402. BPBMI23403. NMMSTP00857. NTOUP200910-153. NTOUP201006-355. RUSI35710. USNM00285950. USNM00285951. ZMUCP43221-*.  
Common Name Pinstriped basslet; Striped basslet; Meteor basslet; Meteor perch 
Redlist Status NL Not in IUCN Redlist     
Characteristic Dorsal rays VI, 12; anal rays III, 8; pectoral rays 15-16; lateral-line scales 44-47; scales dorsally on snout usually reaching to or slightly anterior to posterior nostrils, occasionally halfway or more from posterior nostrils to base of upper lip; region between and below nostrils naked; ventral part of snout and suborbital with or without scales; gill rakers 4-6 + 13-15. Color is light gray when fresh, shading to light red on caudal peduncle and fin, with 8 yellowish brown stripe as described above, the brown concentrated in the middle of the stripe and the yellow at the edges.
habitats Occurs in coral reefs, typical in caves and crevices in lagoon and seaward reefs. 
Distribution Indo-Pacific: Red Sea to the Line Islands and Samoa, north to the Ryukyu Islands, south to Reunion and New Caledonia; Palau to the eastern Caroline and Marshall islands in Micronesia. 
Utility rarely seen by divers, nearly all species is collected by ichthyocides.