List of marine bony fishes of South Africa
This is a sublist of the List of marine fishes of South Africa for bony fishes recorded from the oceans bordering South Africa. This list comprises locally used common names, scientific names with author citation and recorded ranges. Ranges specified may not be the entire known range for the species, but should include the known range within the waters surrounding the Republic of South Africa.
List ordering and taxonomy complies where possible with the current usage in World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS), and may differ from the cited source, as listed citations are primarily for range or existence of records for the region. Sub-taxa within any given taxon are arranged alphabetically as a general rule. Details of each species may be available through the relevant internal links. Synonyms should be listed where relevant.
Osteichthyes (/ˌɒstiːˈɪkθi.iːz/), also known as osteichthyans or commonly referred to as the bony fish, is a diverse superclass of vertebrate animals that have endoskeletons primarily composed of bone tissue. They can be contrasted with the Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fish) and the extinct placoderms and acanthodians, which have endoskeletons primarily composed of cartilage. The vast majority of extant fish are members of Osteichthyes, being an extremely diverse and abundant group consisting of 45 orders, over 435 families and 28,000 species. It is the largest class of vertebrates in existence today, encompassing most aquatic vertebrates, as well as all semi-aquatic and terrestrial vertebrates. (Full article...)
Parvphylum Osteichthyes – Bony fishes
[edit]All entries in this list are included in this parvphylum of Gnathostomata. There are two gigaclasses represented: Actinopterygii and Sarcopterygii.[1]
Gigaclass Actinopterygii – Ray-finned fishes
[edit]Order: Acanthuriformes
[edit]Family: Acanthuridae – Surgeonfishes and unicornfishes.[2]
- Tailring surgeon Acanthurus blochii Valenciennes, 1835 (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Pencilled surgeon Acanthurus dussumieri Valenciennes, 1835 (Port Alfred to Mozambique)[4](Algoa Bay to western Pacific)[3]
- Powder-blue surgeonfish, Acanthurus leucosternon Bennett, 1832 (Sodwana Bay to Indonesia)[3]
- Bluebanded surgeon, Acanthurus lineatus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3][4]
- Elongate surgeon, Acanthurus mata (Cuvier, 1829) (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Epaulette surgeon, Acanthurus nigricauda Duncker and Mohr, 1929 (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Brown surgeon, Acanthurus nigrofuscus (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-Pacific south to Coffee Bay)[3][4]
- Lieutenant surgeonfish, doubleband surgeonfish, Acanthurus tennentii Günther, 1861 (Western Indian Ocean from Natal to Sri Lanka)[3]
- Chocolate surgeon, Acanthurus thompsoni (Fowler, 1923) (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Convict surgeon, Acanthurus triostegus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Indo-Pacific south to Bashee River, with postlarvae as far as Algoa Bay)[4]
- Yellowfin surgeon, Acanthurus xanthopterus Valenciennes, 1835 (Durban to eastern Pacific)[3]
- Twospot bristletooth, Ctenochaetus binotatus Randall, 1955 (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Striped bristletooth, Ctenochaetus striatus (Quoy & Gaimard, 1825) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Spotted bristletooth, Ctenochaetus strigosus (Bennett, 1828) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Whitemargin unicornfish, Naso annulatus (Quoy & Gaimard, 1825)[3]
- Humpback unicorn, Naso brachycentron (Valenciennes, 1835) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Spotted unicorn, Naso brevirostris (Valenciennes, 1835) (Indo-Pacific south to Durban, with juveniles drifting to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Orange-spine unicorn, Naso lituratus (Forster, 1801) (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3][4]
- Humpnose unicorn, Naso tuberosus Lacepède 1802 (Natal to Gilbert Islands)[3]
- Bluespine unicornfish, Naso unicornis (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Bignose unicorn, Naso vlamingii (Valenciennes, 1835) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Palette surgeon, Paracanthurus hepatus (Natal to central Pacific)[3]
- Spotted tang, Zebrasoma gemmatum (Valenciennes, 1835) (Mauritius, Madagascar, Sodwana Bay and 3 specimens from Durban)[3]
- Twotone tang, Zebrasoma scopas (Cuvier, 1829) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Sailfin tang, Zebrasoma velifer (Bloch, 1797) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
Family: Antigoniidae – Boarfishes
- Boarfish Antigonia rubescens (Günther, 1860) (Indo-West Pacific from Natal to Japan)[3][5]
Family: Chaetodontidae – Butterflyfishes
- Threadfin butterflyfish, Chaetodon auriga Forsskål, 1775 (Tropical Ind-Pacific south to Mossel Bay)[3][4]
- Brownburnie, Chaetodon blackburnii Desjardins, 1836 (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Bashee River)[3][4]
- Blackedged butterflyfish Chaetodon dolosus Ahl, 1923 (East African coast south to Xora River)[3][4]
- Gorgeous gussie, peppered butterflyfish, Chaetodon guttatissimus Bennett, 1833 (Durban to Red Sea)[3][4]
- Whitespotted butterflyfish, sunburst butterflyfish, Chaetodon kleinii Bloch, 1790 (Red sea and Indian Ocean south to Coffee Bay)[3][4]
- Lined butterflyfish Chaetodon lineolatus Quoy and gaimard, 1831 (Red sea and Indian Ocean south to Durban)[3]
- Raccoon butterflyfish or Halfmoon butterflyfish, Chaetodon lunula (Lacepède, 1802) (South Africa to Hawaii, Japan and Australia. South to East London)[3][4]
- Pearly butterflyfish, Seychelles butterflyfish, Chaetodon madagaskariensis Ahl, 1923 (Indian Ocean south to Port Elizabeth)[3][4]
- Doublesash butterflyfish, Chaetodon marleyi Regan, 1921 (Lamberts Bay to Maputo. Endemic)[3][4]
- Blackback butterflyfish, Chaetodon melannotus Bloch and Schneider, 1801 (Red Sea south to Durban)[3]
- Maypole butterflyfish, scrawled butterflyfish, Chaetodon meyeri Bloch & Schneider, 1801 (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3][4]
- Rightangle butterflyfish, chevron butterflyfish, Chaetodon trifascialis Quoy and Gaimard, 1825 (Red Sea south to Tugela River)[3]
- Purple butterflyfish, melon butterflyfish, Chaetodon trifasciatus Mungo Park, 1797 (Indo-Pacific from Kosi Bay to Hawaii)[3]
- Limespot butterflyfish, teardrop butterflyfish, Chaetodon unimaculatus Bloch, 1787 (Indian Ocean south to Port Alfred)[3][4]
- Vagabond butterflyfish, Chaetodon vagabundus Linnaeus, 1758 (Red Sea south to Durban)[3][4]
- Yellowhead butterflyfish, Chaetodon xanthocephalus Bennett, 1832 (Western Indian Ocean south to Durban)[3]
- Zanzibar butterflyfish Chaetodon zanzibarensis Playfair, 1867 (Zanzibar to Durban)[3]
- Yellow longnose butterflyfish, Forcipiger flavissimus Jordan & McGregor, 1898 (Red Sea to Durban)[3][4]
- Brushtooth butterflyfish Hemitaurichthys zoster (Bennett, 1831) (Western Indian Ocean south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Coachman, pennant coralfish, Heniochus acuminatus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Port Alfred to Mozambique)[4] (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Schooling coachman, schooling bannerfish, Heniochus diphreutes Jordan, 1903 (Red Sea and Indo-West Pacific south to Durban))[3][4]
- Masked coachman Heniochus monoceros Cuvier, 1831 (Indo-West Pacific south to Cape Vidal)[3][4]
Family: Drepaneidae – Sicklefishes
- Concertina-fish Drepane longimana (Bloch and Schneider, 1801) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to East London)
Family: Ephippidae – Batfishes[6]
- Orbicular batfish, Platax orbicularis (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Knysna)[3][4]
- Dusky batfish, Platax pinnatus (Linnaeus. 1758) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay, possibly Durban)[3]
- Longfin batfish, Platax teira (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- African spadefish, Tripterodon orbis Playfair, 1867 (Port Elizabeth to Kenya)[3][4]
Family: Leiognathidae – Soapies
- Slender soapy, Deveximentum insidiator (Bloch, 1787), recorded as syn. Secutor insidiator (Bloch, 1787), (Indo-West Pacific south to East London)[3][4][7]
- Toothed soapy Gazza minuta (Bloch, 1797) (Indo-Pacific south to Port Alfred)[3]
- Slimy Leiognathus equula (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-Pacific south to East London)[3][4]
- Pugnose soapy, Leiognathus ruconius (Hamilton, 1822), recorded as syn. Secutor ruconius (Hamilton-Buchanan, 1822), (Indo-West Pacific south to Transkei)[3][8]
Family: Lobotidae – Tripletails
- Atlantic tripletail, Lobotes surinamensis (Bloch, 1790) (Cape St Francis northwards, all tropical and subtropical oceans)[3]
Family: Luvaridae – Louvar
- Louvar, Luvarus imperialis Rafinesque, 1810 (All oceans and Mediterranean sea, Not reported in polar seas or near equator)[3]
Family: Pomacanthidae – Angelfishes
- Tiger angelfish Apolemichthys kingi Heemstra, 1984 (Only known from off Natal: Durban, Tongaat and Aliwal shoal)[3]
- Threespot angelfish Apolemichthys trimaculatus (Lacepède, 1831) (Indo-West Pacific to Natal)[3]
- Jumping bean, orangeback angelfish, Centropyge acanthops (Norman, 1922) (Port Elizabeth to Somalia)[3][4]
- Coral beauty, twospined angelfish, Centropyge bispinosa (Günther, 1860) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana)[3]
- Dusky cherub Centropyge multispinis (Playfair, 1867) (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Goldtail angelfish, Pomacanthus chrysurus Cuvier, 1831 (Indo-West Pacific south to Aliwal Shoal)[3]
- Emperor angelfish, Pomacanthus imperator (Bloch, 1787) (Indo-West Pacific south to East London)[3][4]
- Old woman angelfish, Pomacanthus rhomboides (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Red Sea to Knysna)[3][4] Previously known as Pomacanthus striatus Rüppell, 1836, but Rüppell's species is a synonym of P. maculosus (Forsskål, 1775)[9]
- Semicircle angelfish Pomacanthus semicirculatus (Cuvier, 1831) (Indo-West Pacific to Port Elizabeth)[3][4]
- Royal angelfish, Pygoplites diacanthus (Boddaert, 1772) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)
Family: Scatophagidae – Scatties
- Scatty Scatophagus tetracanthus (Lacepède, 1802) (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
Family: Siganidae – Rabbitfishes
- Starspotted rabbitfish Siganus stellatus (Forsskål, 1775) (Kosi Bay north to Red Sea)[3]
- Whitespotted rabbitfish Siganus sutor (Valenciennes, 1835) (Western Indian Ocean, stragglers as far south as Knysna)[3][4]
Family: Zanclidae – Moorish idol
- Moorish idol Zanclus cornutus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Africa to Mexico south to Mossel Bay)[3][4] (syn. Zanclus canescens)
Order Acropomatiformes
[edit]Family: Acropomatidae – Lanternbellies
- Lanternbelly Acropoma japonicum Günther, 1859 (off Natal)[3]
- Sombre splitfin, Silver splitfin, Verilus cynodon (Regan, 1921), reported as syn. Neoscombrops annectens Gilchrist, 1922 (off Natal and southern Mozambique)[3] and as syn. Neoscombrops cynodon (Regan, 1921) (Known from 2 specimens off Natal)[3][10]
- Japanese splitfin Synagrops japonicus (Doderlein, 1884) (off Natal)[3]
Family: Bathyclupeidae – Bathyclupeids
- Neobathyclupea elongata (Trunov, 1975), recorded as syn. Bathyclupea elongata Trunov, 1975 (Known only from holotype taken off Western Cape)[3][11]
Family: Champsodontidae – Gapers
- Gaper, Champsodon capensis (Regan, 1908) (Cape of Good Hope to Durban)[3]
Family: Creediidae – Sand burrowers
- longfin burrower Apodocreedia vanderhorsti de Beaufort, 1948 (Durban to Delagoa Bay)[3]
- Sand submarine Limnichthys nitidus Smith 1958 (Red Sea south to Chaka's Rock, KwaZulu-Natal)[3]
Family: Epigonidae – Cardinal fishes
- Pencil cardinal, Epigonus denticulatus Dieuzeide, 1950 (Walvis Bay to Cape Point)[3]
- Epigonus pandionis (Goode & Bean, 1881) (Gulf of Guinea to Agulhas Bank)[3]
- Robust cardinalfish, Epigonus robustus (Barnard, 1927) (off west coast of South Africa)[3]
- Telescope cardinal Epigonus telescopus (Risso, 1810) (Walvis Bay to Cape Town)[3]
Family: Howellidae
- Howella sherborni (Norman, 1930) (off Cape Town to Natal)[3][12]
Family: Pempheridae – Sweepers
- Slender sweeper Parapriacanthus ransonneti Steindachner, 1870 (Red Sea south to Transkei)[3]
- Dusky sweeper Pempheris adusta Bleeker, 1877 (Indo-West Pacific south to Transkei)[3][4]
- Black-stripe sweeper Pempheris schwenkii Bleeker, 1855 (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
Family: Pentacerotidae – Armourheads
- Sailfin armourhead, Histiopterus typus Temminck & Schlegel, 1844 (Cape Agulhas to Natal)[3]
- Cape armourhead Pentaceros capensis Cuvier, 1829 (Port Nolloth to Southern Mozambique)[3]
- Pelagic armourhead Pentaceros richardsoni, Smith, 1844, recorded as Pseudopentaceros richardsoni, (Smith, 1844) (Cape Town to Natal)[3][13]
Family: Polyprionidae – Wreckfishes
- Atlantic wreckfish, Polyprion americanus (Schneider, 1801) (Norway to South Africa)[3]
Family: Scombropidae – Gnomefishes
- Gnomefish Scombrops boops (Houttuyn, 1782) (Cape of Good Hope to Delagoa Bay)[3]
Order Albuliformes – Bonefishes
[edit]Family: Albulidae
- Bonefish, Albula vulpes (Linnaeus, 1758) (Algoa Bay to tropics)[3]
Order Anguilliformes – Eels
[edit]Family: Anguillidae – Freshwater eels
- African mottled eel, Anguilla labiata (Peters, 1852), recorded as syn. Anguilla bengalensis labiata (Peters, 1852) (Knysna to Kenya)[3][14]
- Shortfin eel, Indonesian shortfin eel, Anguilla bicolor, recorded as syn. Anguilla bicolor bicolor McClelland, 1844 (Knysna to Kenya)[3][15]
- Madagascar mottled eel, giant mottled eel, Anguilla marmorata Quoy and Gaimard, 1824 (Western Cape to Kenya)[3]
- Longfin eel, African longfin eel, Anguilla mossambica (Peters, 1852) (Most waters of the Cape northwards)[3]
Family: Chlopsidae – False morays
- Plain false moray Kaupichthys hyoproroides (Strömman, 1896) (Natal)[3]
Family: Moringuidae – Spaghetti eels
- Spaghetti eel, lesser thrush eel, Moringua microchir (Bleeker, 1853) (Natal to Indo-West Pacific)[3]
Family: Muraenidae – Moray eels
- Anarchias seychellensis Smith, 1962 (Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Whiteface moray Echidna leucotaenia Schultz, 1943 (Natal northwards and east to central Pacific)[3]
- Floral moray, snowflake moray, Echidna nebulosa (Ahl, 1789) (Port Alfred to Mozambique)[3][4]
- Barred moray Echidna polyzona (Richardson, 1945) (Natal northwards, Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Blackcheek moray eel, Gymnothorax breedeni McCosker and Randall, 1977 (Sodwana Bay))[3]
- Latticetail moray, Gymnothorax buroensis (Bleeker, 1857) (Natal northwards, Indo-Pacific))[3]
- Tiger moray Gymnothorax enigmaticus McCosker and Randall, 1882 (Natal, Indo-Pacific))[3]
- Salt and pepper moray, Abbott's moray eel, Gymnothorax eurostus (Abbott, 1861) (Transkei to Bazaruto))[3]
- Honeycomb moray, laced moray Gymnothorax favagineus Bloch & Schneider, 1801 (Port Elizabeth to Mozambique))[3][4] or reticulated moray, reported as syn. Gymnothorax permistus (Smith, 1962) (Transkei to Delagoa Bay)[3][16]
- Yellow-edged moray Gymnothorax flavimarginatus (Rüppell, 1830) (Transkei northwards, Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Freckled moray, brown-spotted moray eel, Gymnothorax fuscomaculatus (Schultz, 1953) (Natal; Central Pacific)[3]
- Geometric moray, Gymnothorax griseus (Lacepède, 1803) (Transkei to Red Sea)[3](syn. Sideria grisea)
- White-spotted moray eel, Gymnothorax johnsoni (Smith, 1962) (Algoa Bay to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Trunk-eyed moray, blotch-necked moray eel, Gymnothorax margaritophorus (Bleeker, 1865) (Transkei to Bazaruto, Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Blackspot moray Gymnothorax melatremus (Schultz, 1953) (Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Guineafowl moray, turkey moray, Gymnothorax meleagris (Shaw and Nodder, 1795) (Algoa Bay to southern Mozambique; Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Starry moray Gymnothorax nudivomer (Günther, 1867)(Transkei to Zanzibar)[3]
- Paintspotted moray Gymnothorax pictus (Ahl, 1789) (Natal to Indo-Pacific)[3](syn. Siderea picta)
- Leopard moray, undulated moray, Gymnothorax undulatus (Lacepède, 1803) (Port Alfred to southern Mozambique; Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Bar-tail moray, barred-fin moray, Gymnothorax zonipectis Seale, 1906 (Sodwana Bay, central Pacific)[3]
- Zebra moray, Gymnomuraena zebra (Shaw, 1797), also reported as syn. Echidna zebra, (Transkei to Mozambique))[3][4]
- Tiger reef-eel Scuticaria tigrina (Lesson, 1828) (Natal to Southern Mozambique; Indo-Pacific)[3](syn. Uropterygius tigrinus(Lesson, 1829))
- Slender giant moray Strophidon sathete (Hamilton, 1822) (Bashee River to tropical Indo-Pacific)[3](syn. Thyrsoidea macrura (Bleeker, 1854))
- Uniform reef-eel Uropterygius concolor Rüppell, 1838 (Durban to Red Sea)[3]
- Barlip reef eel Uropterygius kamar McCosker and Randall, 1977 (Sodwana Bay; Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Shortfinned reef eel Uropterygius micropterus (Bleeker, 1852) (Durban northwards; Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Freckleface reef eel Uropterygius xanthopterus Bleeker, 1859 (Sodwana Bay to southern Mozambique: Indo-Pacific)[3]
Family: Congridae – Conger eels
- Blunt-tooth conger, Ariosoma mauritianum (Pappenheim, 1914) (Natal to Indo-West Pacific)[3]
- Tropical conger Ariosoma scheelei (Stromman, 1896) (Natal to Mozambique and Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Hairy conger Bassanago albescens (Barnard, 1923) (Cape Point)[3]
- Longnose conger, Bathycongrus wallacei (Castle, 1968), recorded as syn, Rhechias wallacei (Castle, 1968) (Natal to southern Mozambique)[17]
- Large-toothed conger, Bathyuroconger vicinus (Vaillant, 1888) (off Cape Point)[3]
- Indo-Pacific shorttail conger,Coloconger scholesi Chan, 1967 (Natal to southern Mozambique)[3]
- Blackedged conger, longfin African conger, Conger cinereus Rüppell, 1830 (Mossel Bay to Mozambique)[3][4]
- Cape conger, Conger wilsoni (Bloch and Schneider 1801) (Cape to southern Mozambique)[3]
- Southern conger Gnathophis capensis (Kaup, 1856) (False Bay to Plettenberg Bay)[3]
- Strap conger Gnathophis habenatus (Richardson, 1848) (Southern Cape to East London)[3]
- Longtail conger, slender conger, Uroconger lepturus (Richardson, 1854) (Natal to Red Sea and Indo-Pacific)[3]
Family: Derichthyidae – Longneck eels
- narrownecked oceanic eel, Derichthys serpentinus Gill, 1884 (west of Cape Town; worldwide)[3]
- Duckbill oceanic eel, Nessorhamphus ingolfianus (Schmidt, 1912) (off the Cape, also worldwide)[3]
Family: Muraenesocidae – Pike congers
- Common pike conger, Muraenesox bagio (Hamilton-Buchanan, 1822) (Knysna to Indo-Pacific)[3]
Family: Nettastomatidae – Witch eels
- Whipsnout sorcerer, Venefica proboscidea (Vaillant, 1888) (off the Cape)[3]
Family: Ophichthidae – Snake-eels and worm-eels
- Snake eel Apterichtus klazingai (Weber. 1913) (off Durban; Indonesia and western Pacific)[3]
- Longtailed sand-eel, Bascanichthys kirkii (Günther, 1870) (Natal to Aden)[3]
- Crocodile snake eel, Brachysomophis crocodilinus (Bennett, 1833) (Natal, Tanzania, Seychelles, Mauritius and Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Marbled snake-eel Callechelys marmorata (Bleeker, 1853) (Natal to central Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Fringelip snake-eel, Cirrhimuraena playfairii (Günther, 1870) (Kosi Bay to Zanzibar)[3]
- Sharpnose sand-eel Ichthyapus acuticeps (Barnard, 1923) (Durban to Zululand)[3]
- Finny sand-eel, oriental worm-eel, Lamnostoma orientale (McClelland, 1844) (Natal)[3]
- Halfbanded snake-eel, saddled snake-eel, Leiuranus semicinctus (Lay and Bennett, 1839) (Knysna to Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Ocellated snake-eel Myrichthys maculosus (Cuvier, 1816) (Port Alfred to Kenya, Indo-Pacific and eastern PacificM)[3][4]
- Bluntnose snake eel, Ophichthus apicalis (Bennett, 1830) (St Francis Bay to Kenya, Madagascar and Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Slender snake-eel, Ophichthus serpentinus Seale, 1917, recorded as syn. Ophichthus bennettai McCosker, 1986 (Cape Province west coast)[3][18]
- Saddled snake-eel Ophichthus erabo (Jordan and Snyder, 1901) (off Durban; Indo-Pacific to Hawaii)[3]
- Shorthead snake eel Ophichthus marginatus (Peters, 1855) (Knysna; Aldabra to Inhaca)[3]
- Plain snake eel, Ophichthus unicolor Regan, 1908 (Algoa Bay)[3]
- Sand snake-eel, serpent eel, Ophisurus serpens (Linnaeus 1766) (Angola to southern Mozambique)[3]
- Estuary snake-eel, rice-paddy eel, Pisodonophis boro (Hamilton-Buchanan, 1822) (Knysna to Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Longfin snake-eel Pisodonophis cancrivorus (Richardson, 1844) (Algoa Bay to Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Slender worm-eel Scolecenchelys gymnota (Bleeker, 1857) (Bredasdorp to Zululand, east Africa to central Pacific)[3](syn. Muraenichthys gymnotus Bleeker, 1864)
- Redfin worm-eel Scolecenchelys laticaudata (Ogilby, 1897) (East London to Indo-Pacific)[3](syn. Muraenichthys laticaudata (Ogilby, 1897)
- Orangehead worm-eel Scolecenchelys xorae (Smith, 1958) (Algoa Bay to Natal)[3](syn. Muraenichthys xorae Smith, 1958)
- Earthworm snake-eel, Yirrkala lumbricoides (Bleeker 1853) (off Durban; Northern Australia and Indo Pacific)[3]
- Thin sand-eel, Yirrkala tenuis (Günther, 1870)(Natal to southern Mozambique, Red Sea and possibly Mauritius)[3]
Family: Nemichthyidae – Snipe eels
- Avocettina acuticeps (Regan, 1916) (offshore Cape to Natal)[3]
- Avocettina paucipora Nielsen and Smith, 1978 (off Durban)[3]
- Nemichthys curvirostris (Strömman, 1896) (off the Cape)[3]
- Nemichthys scolopaceus (Richardson, 1848) (off the Cape to Natal)[3]
Family: Serrivomeridae – Sawtooth eels
- Serrivomer beanii Gill and Ryder, 1883 (off Cape and Natal)[3]
Family: Synaphobranchidae – Cutthroat eels
- Diastobranchus capensis Barnard, 1923 (off Cape Point)[3]
- Arrowtooth eel Dysomma anguillare Barnard, 1923 (Off Tugela river, Natal)[3]
- Histiobranchus bathybius (Günther, 1877) (off Durban)[3]
- Ilyophis brunneus Gilbert, 1892 (Off the Cape)[3]
- Simenchelys parasitica Gill, 1879 (off the Cape)[3]
- Synaphobranchus affinis Günther, 1877 (off Durban)[3]
- Synaphobranchus kaupii Johnson, 1862 (off the Cape)[3]
Order Alepocephaliformes
[edit]Family: Alepocephalidae – Slickheads
- Alepocephalus australis Barnard 1923 (Off Cape Point; apparently widely distributed in temperate waters of southern hemisphere)[3]
- Rouleina maderensis Maul, 1948 (3 specimens from off South Africa)[3]
- Talismania kotlyari Sazonov & Ivanov, 1980 (One specimen from 24°55'S, 35°40'E)[3]
- Bluntsnout smooth-head, Xenodermichthys copei (Gill, 1884) (common off South Africa)[3]
Order Argentiniformes
[edit]Family: Argentinidae – Argentines
- Argentina euchus Cohen, 1961 (Natal to Kenya)[3]
Family: Opisthoproctidae – Barreleyes
- Rhynchohyalus natalensis (Gilchrist and von Bonde, 1924) (off Cape Town to Bermuda)[3]
Family: Microstomatidae
- Nansenia macrolepis (Gilchrist, 1922) (off Natal; West of Cape Peninsula)[3]
Subfamily: Bathylaginae – Deep sea smelts
- Melanolagus bericoides (Borodin, 1929), recorded as syn. Bathylagus bericoides (Borodin, 1929) (off Cape Town; Throughout tropical and subtropical seas)[3][19]
Order Ateleopodiformes
[edit]Family: Ateleopodidae – Tadpole fishes
- Ateleopus natalensis Regan, 1921 (Cape to Red sea)[3]
- Guentherus altivela Osorio, 1917 (West coast of Africa from Cabo Blanco to the Cape)[3]
- Ijimaia loppei Roule, 1922 (Morocco to Cape Peninsula)[3]
Order: Atheriniformes
[edit]Family: Atherinidae – Silversides
- Cape silverside, Atherina breviceps Valenciennes, 1835 (Luderitz to northern KwaZulu-Natal)[3][4]
- Hardyhead silverside, Atherinomorus lacunosus (Forster, 1801) (East London to Indo-West Pacific)[3][4]
- Pricklenose silverside, Atherion africanum Smith, 1965 (Natal to India)[3]
- Slender silverside Hypoatherina barnesi Schultz, 1953 (Natal to Comores)[3]
Family: Notocheiridae – Surf sprites
- Surf sprite Iso natalensis Regan, 1919 (Indian ocean south to Cape Agulgas)[3]
Order Aulopiformes
[edit]Family: Alepisauridae – Lancetfishes
- Shortsnout lancetfish, lancetfish, Alepisaurus brevirostris Gibbs, 1960 (one specimen from off Algoa Bay; in all major oceans)[3]
- Longsnout lancetfish Alepisaurus ferox Lowe, 1833 (Walvis Bay to Sodwana Bay; in all major oceans)[3]
Family: Evermannellidae – Sabretooth fishes
- Coccorella atlantica (Parr, 1928) (central water areas of all 3 major oceans; off western and south-western Cape coast, 1 specimen from 31°34'S, 30°09'E)[3]
- Balbo sabretooth, Evermannella balbo (Risso, 1820) (4 specimens from off southern Natal, presumed to be circumglobal in transition region of southern oceans)[3]
Family Omosudidae
- Hammerjaw, Omosudis lowii Günther, 1887 (1 specimen from not far off east coast at about 25°S; otherwise known from all oceans between 40°S and 40°N)[3][20]
Family: Paralepididae – Barracudinas (incl. Anotopteridae – Daggertooths)
- Anotopterus pharao Zugmeyer, 1911 (off west coast; south of Cape Agulhas; off Transkei and in Mozambique channel; worldwide between 25°N and 65°S)[3]
- Lestidiops jayakari (Boulenger, 1889) (worldwide in tropical to temperate waters)[3]
- Lestidiops similis (Ege, 1933) (Tropical and temperate Atlantic between 45°N and 45°S)[3]
- Lestidium atlanticum (Borodin, 1928) (Tropical to subtropical all oceans)[3]
- Lestrolepis intermedia (Poey, 1868) (Tropical in all oceans; off South Africa only in Agulhas current)[3]
- Macroparalepis affinis Ege, 1933 (anti-tropical in Atlantic Ocean)[3]
- Macroparalepis macrogeneion Post, 1973 (South Atlantic sub-tropical convergence area from South Africa to continental slope off South America)[3]
- Magnisudis prionosa (Rofen, 1963) (Circumglobal in southern oceans from 20°S to Antarctic)[3]
- Spotted barracudina, Arctozenus risso (Bonaparte, 1840), recorded as syn. Notolepis rissoi (Bonaparte, 1840) (worldwide in temperate and tropical waters)[3][21]
- Paralepis elongata (Brauer, 1906) (One specimen from Natal, now missing)[3]
- Stemonosudis elegans (Ege, 1933) (tropical Indo-Pacific, off South Africa only in Agulhas current)[3]
- Stemonosudis gracilis (Ege, 1933) (Tropical waters of Indian and Pacific oceans; Off South Africa only in Agulhas current)[3]
- Sudis hyalina Rafinesque, 1810 (Atlantic Ocean from 50°N to South Africa)[3]
Family: Scopelarchidae – Pearleyes
- Benthalbella infans Zugmayer, 1911 (off south-western Cape; tropical/subtropical in all 3 major oceans)[3]
- Lagiacrusichthys macropinnis (Bussing & Bussing, 1966), recorded as Benthalbella macropinna Bussing and Bussing, 1966 (off south-western Cape coast; circumpolar in subantarctic and Antarctic waters)[3][22]
- Short fin pearleye,[citation needed] Scopelarchus analis (Brauer, 1902) (Common off southern Africa; tropical/subtropical all oceans)[3]
- Staring pearleye,[citation needed] Scopelarchus guentheri Alcock, 1896 (off Durban; mainly tropical in the Atlantic, tropical/subtropical in Indian and Pacific oceans)[3]
- Bigfin pearleye,[citation needed] Scopelarchus michaelsarsi Koefoed, 1955 (South-east of Durban;tropical/subtropical in all oceans)[3]
Family: Ipnopidae
- Black lizardfish, Bathysauropsis gracilis (Günther, 1878) (off Cape Point; circumglobal in southern oceans)[3][23]
Family: Chlorophthalmidae – Greeneyes
- Chlorophthalmus punctatus Gilchrist, 1904 (both coasts of South Africa)[3] (possibly a synonym of C.agassizii Bonaparte, 1840)
Family: Ipnopidae
- Bathymicrops regis Hjort and Koefoed, 1912 (once off Port Elizabeth in Agulhas basin)[3]
- Bathypterois filiferus Gilchrist, 1906 (off Cape Point)[3]
- Bathypterois guentheri Alcock, 1889 (off east coast between 22° - 33°S)[3]
- Bathypterois phenax Parr, 1928 (off Cape Point)[3]
- Bathytyphlops marionae Mead, 1959 (off Beira, Durban and Agulhas bank)[3]
- Grideye fish,[citation needed] Ipnops agassizii Garman, 1899 (off Cape Point)[3]
Family: Notosudidae – Notosudids
- Scopelosaurus ahlstromi Bertelsen, Krefft and Marshall, 1976 (all 3 oceans from about 32° to 45°S)[3]
- Scopelosaurus hamiltoni (Waite, 1916) (Southern oceans from about 30° to 60°S)[3]
- Scopelosaurus herwigi Bertelson, Krefft and Marshall, 1976 (slope areas of Southern Africa)[3]
- Scopelosaurus meadi Bertelson, Krefft and Marshall, 1976 (from about 19° to 43°S)[3]
- Scopelosaurus smithii Bean, 1925 (mainly tropical, larger juveniles and adults also subtropical in all 3 oceans)[3]
Family: Bathysauridae
- Bathysaurus ferox Günther, 1878 (off Cape Province; Both sides of Atlantic; off New Zealand)[3]
Family: Giganturidae – Telescopefish
- Gigantura indica Brauer, 1901, recorded as syn. Rosaura indica (Brauer, 1901) (Tropical/subtropical in all 3 major oceans; Indian Ocean from 35°49'S, 23°09'E northwards)[3][24]
Family: Synodontidae – Lizardfishes
- Blotchy lizardfish Saurida gracilis (Quoy and Gaimard, 1824) (Indo-West Pacific to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Largescale lizardfish Saurida undosquamis (Richardson, 1848) (Indo-West Pacific to Knysna)[3]
- Spotnose lizardfish Synodus binotatus Schultz, 1953 (Indo-West Pacific, south to Natal)[3]
- Variegated lizardfish Synodus dermatogenys Fowler, 1912 (Indo-West Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Indian lizardfish Synodus indicus (Day, 1873) (Mossel Bay to Red Sea and Sri Lanka)[3]
- Blacktail lizardfish Synodus jaculum Russell and Cressey, 1979 (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Redband lizardfish Synodus variegatus (Lacepède, 1803) (Central KwaZulu-Natal to Red Sea)[3][4]
- Painted lizardfish Trachinocephalus myops (Forster, 1801) (Tropical and warm temperate waters of all oceans, east coast south to Knysna)[3]
Order Batrachoidiformes
[edit]Family: Batrachoididae – Toadfishes
- Puzzled toadfish Austrobatrachus foedus (Smith, 1947) (Algoa Bay to Coffee Bay, Transkei)[3]
- White-ribbed toadfish Batrichthys albofasciatus Smith, 1934 (1 specimen, Great Fish Point)[3]
- Snakehead toadfish Batrichthys apiatus (Valenciennes, 1837) (Saldanha Bay to Umtata River, Transkei)[4]
- Pleated toadfish Batrichthys felinus Smith, 1952 (Cape to Port Alfred)[3]
- Chocolate toadfish Chatrabus hendersoni Smith, 1952 (Port Alfred to Storms River Mouth)[3]
- Broadbodied toadfish Riekertia ellisi Smith, 1952 (Durban to Port St. Johns)[3]
Order Beloniformes
[edit]Family: Belonidae – Needlefishes
- Barred needlefish, flat needlefish, Ablennes hians (Valenciennes, 1846) (Worldwide in tropical and subtropical waters, south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Cape needlefish, Petalichthys capensis Regan, 1904 (South African endemic, False Bay to Pondoland)[3]
- Garfish or Yellow needlefish or Banded needlefish, Strongylura leiura (Bleeker, 1850) (Durban to Persian Gulf)[3][4]
- Crocodile needlefish, houndfish, Tylosurus crocodilus crocodilus (Peron and Lesueur, 1821) (Indo-West Pacific south to Knysna)[3]
Family: Exocoetidae – Flyingfishes
- Blackwing flyingfish Cheilopogon cyanopterus (Valenciennes, 1846) (Tropical and subtropical Atlantic, Indian and Pacific oceans. One juvenile from Port Alfred, another from Natal)[3]
- Spotfin flyingfish Cheilopogon furcatus (Mitchill, 1815) (offshore in all tropical seas. Off South African coast from the Cape eastwards)[3]
- Blackfin flyingfish Cheilopogon nigricans (Bennett, 1840) (Tropical eastern Atlantic to Indo-West Pacific. One specimen known from South African waters)[3]
- Smallhead flyingfish Cheilopogon pinnatibarbatus altipinnis (Valenciennes, 1846) (Cape to Kosi Bay)[3]
- Two-wing flyingfish Exocoetus monocirrhus (Richardson, 1846) (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Tropical two-wing flyingfish Exocoetus volitans (Linnaeus, 1758) (worldwide in tropical waters, occasionally seen in South African waters)[3]
- Subtropical flyingfish Hirundichthys rondeletii (Valenciennes, 1846) (widely distributed in subtropical waters of all oceans, common off the Cape)[3]
- Mirrorwing flyingfish, Hirundichthys speculiger (Valenciennes, 1846) (worldwide in tropical waters, one juvenile from Mbibi, Zululand, another from False Bay)[3]
- Sailfin flying fish, Parexocoetus brachypterus (Richardson, 1846) (Tropical Indo-Pacific, south to Natal)[3]
- Shortfin flyingfish Prognichthys brevipinnis (Valenciennes, 1846) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific, recorded from Lake St. Lucia and Indian Ocean off South Africa)[3]
- Shortnose flyingfish Prognichthys sealei (Abe, 1955) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific; one adolescent off Cape St. Lucia and a small juvenile from Port Elizabeth)[3]
Family: Hemiramphidae – Halfbeaks
- Ribbon halfbeak Euleptorhamphus viridis (van Hasselt, 1823) (reported from Table Bay, also known from Algoa bay and Kei river Mouth. Tropical and temperate waters of Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Spotted halfbeak Hemiramphus far (Forsskål, 1775) (Knysna to Delagoa Bay. a few records west to False Bay)[3][4]
- Tropical halfbeak Hyporhamphus affinis (Günther, 1866) (Sodwana Bay to tropical west Indo-Pacific)[3][4]
- Cape halfbeak Hyporhamphus capensis (Thominot, 1886) (False Bay to southern Mozambique)[3][4]
Family: Scomberesocidae – Sauries
- Dwarf saury Nanichthys simulans Hubbs and Wisner, 1980 (Warm temperate waters of the Atlantic and southern Indian oceans; Off the Cape up the west coast)[3]
Order Beryciformes
[edit]Family: Barbourisiidae – Red whalefish
- Velvet whalefish, Barbourisia rufa Parr, 1954 (occasionally trawled off West Coast. Atlantic Ocean (56°N- 35°S))[3][25]
Family: Berycidae – Berycids
- Beryx, alfonsino, Beryx decadactylus Cuvier, 1829 (Saldanha Bay to Natal)[3]
- Slender beryx, splendid alfonsino, Beryx splendens Lowe, 1834 (Saldanha Bay to Natal)[3]
- Short alfonsino Centroberyx spinosus (Gilchrist, 1903) (Storms river to Durban)[3] (also reported from False Bay)
Family: Cetomimidae – Whalefishes
- Cetichthys indagator (Rofen, 1959), recorded as syn. Cetomimus indagator Rofen, 1959 (1 specimen off Port St Johns, former Transkei)[3][26]
- Cetomimus picklei (Gilchrist, 1922) (1 specimen off Cape Town)[3]
Family: Melamphaidae – Bigscale fishes
- Melamphaes eulepis Ebeling, 1962 (Atlantic south of 13°S, around Africa, in Indian Ocean, throughout Indonesia and in central equatorial Pacific)[3]
- Melamphaes microps (Günther, 1878) (off South Africa and New Zealand)[3]
- Melamphaes simus Ebeling, 1962 (Tropical/subtropical regions of Atlantic, Indian and Pacific oceans)[3]
- Poromitra crassiceps (Günther, 1878) (All oceans except Arctic and Mediterranean)[3]
- Poromitra megalops (Lütken, 1877) (Eastern Atlantic, Indo-Pacific and eastern equatorial Pacific)[3]
- Scopeloberyx robustus (Günther, 1887) (Tropical/subtropical regions of Atlantic, Indian and Pacific oceans)[3]
- Scopelogadus beanii (Günther, 1887) (Atlantic, southern Indian and western south Pacific oceans)[3]
- Sio nordenskjoldii (Lönnberg, 1905) (South Atlantic and Indian oceans south of 30°S; several records off South Africa)[3]
Family: Rondeletiidae – Redmouth whalefish
- Rondeletia loricata Abe and Hotta, 1963 (3 specimens taken off Southern Cape coast of South Africa)[3]
Family: Stephanoberycidae – Pricklefishes
- Acanthochaenus lutkeni Gill, 1884 (off mid Atlantic USA, Azores and off Durban (29°42'S, 33°19'E)[3]
Order: Blenniiformes
[edit]Family: Blenniidae – Blennies
- Dwarf blenny Alloblennius parvus Springer & Spreitzar, 1978 (Comores and 1 specimen from Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Moustached rockskipper Antennablennius australis Fraser-Brunner, 1951 (Port Elizabeth to Red Sea)[3]
- Horned rockskipper Antennablennius bifilum (Günther, 1861) (Port Alfred to the Persian Gulf)[3][4]
- Floating blenny Aspidontus dussumieri (Valenciennes, 1836) (Red Sea south to Knysna)[3]
- Mimic blenny, false cleanerfish, Aspidontus taeniatus Quoy & Gaimard, 1834 (Red Sea south to Durban)[3][4] (syn. Aspidontus taeniatus tractusFowler, 1903)
- Picture rockskipper Blenniella gibbifrons (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824), recorded as syn. Istiblennius gibbifrons (Quoy & Gaimard, 1836) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3][27]
- Looseskin blenny Chalaroderma capito (Valenciennes, 1836) (Saldanha Bay to East London)[3]
- Two-eyed blenny Chalaroderma ocellata (Gilchrist and Thompson, 1908) (Saldanha Bay to Port Elizabeth)[3]
- Blackflap blenny Cirripectes auritus (Carlson, 1981) (Line islands, Philippines, Grand Comoro, Kenya and Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Muzzled rockskipper Cirripectes castaneus (Valenciennes, 1836) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Golden blenny, Midas blenny, Ecsenius midas (Starck, 1969) (Red Sea to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Nalolo Ecsenius nalolo Smith, 1959 (Red Sea to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Fringelip rockskipper Entomacrodus epalzeocheilos (Bleeker, 1859) (Indo-Pacific, 1 specimen from Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Pearly rockskipper Entomacrodus striatus (Valenciennes, 1836), (Western Indian Ocean to 30°S)[3]
- Leopard rockskipper Exallias brevis (Kner, 1868) (Red Sea to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Highbrow rockskipper Hirculops cornifer (Rüppell, 1830) (Red Sea to Pondoland)[3]
- Impspringer, Istiblennius bellus (Günther, 1861) recorded as syn. Istiblennius impudens Smith, 1959 (Western Indian Ocean south to Sodwana Bay)[3][28]
- Streaky rockskipper Istiblennius dussumieri (Valenciennes, 1836) (Indo-Pacific south to Bashee River)[3][4]
- Rippled rockskipper Istiblennius edentulus (Forster & Schneider, 1801) (Indo-Pacific south to East London)[3][4]
- Bullethead rockskipper, Blenniella periophthalmus (Valenciennes, 1836), recorded as syn. Istiblennius periophthalmus (Valenciennes, 1836) (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3][29]
- Rusi blenny, Mimoblennius rusi Springer & Spreitzer, 1978 (Known only from Sodwana Bay area)[3]
- Bandit blenny, Omobranchus banditus Smith, 1959, (Bazaruto to Port Alfred)[3][4]
- Kappie blenny, Omobranchus woodi (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Eastern Cape estuaries, East London to Knysna)[3][4]
- Horned blenny Parablennius cornutus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Northern Namibia to Sodwana Bay, Endemic)[3][4]
- Ringneck blenny, Parablennius pilicornis (Cuvier, 1829) (Knysna to Sodwana Bay)[3][4]
- Kosi rockskipper Pereulixia kosiensis (Regan, 1908) (Durban north to Pakistan)[3]
- Sabretooth blenny Petroscirtes breviceps (Valenciennes, 1836) (Natal to Japan and New Guinea)[3]
- Twostripe blenny, bluestriped fangblenny, Plagiotremus rhinorhynchos (Bleeker, 1852) (Indo-Pacific south to Knysna)[3]
- Piano blenny, mimic blenny Plagiotremus tapeinosoma (Bleeker, 1857) (Indo-Pacific south to False Bay)[3]
- Maned blenny Scartella emarginata (Günther, 1861) (Southern Angola to India)[3][4]
- Japanese snakeblenny Xiphasia matsubarai Okada & Suzuki, 1952 (Western Indian Ocean south to False Bay)[3]
- Snakeblenny Xiphasia setifer Swainson, 1839 (Red Sea to False Bay)[3]
Family: Clinidae – Klipfishes
- Lace klipfish, Blennioclinus brachycephalus (Valenciennes, 1836) (Melkboschstrand to Kei River)[3]
- Silverbubble klipfish, Blennioclinus stella Smith, 1946 (Algoa Bay to north of Durban)[3]
- Snaky klipfish, Blenniophis anguillaris (Valenciennes, 1836) (Lüderitz Bay to East London)[3]
- Striped klipfish, Blenniophis striatus (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Saldanha Bay to East London)[3]
- Slender platanna-klipfish Cancelloxus burrelli Smith, 1961 (Orange River to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Whiteblotched klipfish Cancelloxus elongatus Heemstra and Wright, 1986 (Storms River mouth to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Cancelloxus longior Prochazka & Griffiths, 1991,[30][31]
- Barbelled klipfish Cirrhibarbus capensis Valenciennes, 1836 (Lambert's Bay to East London)[3]
- Fleet klipfish Climacoporus navalis Barnard, 1935 (Still Bay to Port St. Johns. Once from False Bay)[3]
- Ladder klipfish Clinoporus biporosus (Gilchrist and Thompson, 1908) (Saldanha Bay to False Bay)[3]
- Sad klipfish Clinus acuminatus (Schneider, 1801) (Lüderitz Bay to west of Algoa Bay)[3]
- Agile klipfish Clinus agilis Smith, 1931 (Namibia (20°49'S) to Port Alfred)[3][4]
- Clinus arborescens Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908,[32][33] previously reported as C. supeciliosus (part of complex)[citation needed][34]
- Onrust klipfish Clinus berrisfordi Penrith, 1967 (Weedy areas of False Bay to Skoenmakerskop, just west of Algoa Bay)[3]
- Cape klipfish Clinus brevicristatus Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908 (Lambert's Bay to False Bay)[3]
- Clinus capensis (Valenciennes, 1836),[35]
- Bluntnose klipfish Clinus cottoides Valenciennes, 1836 (Olifants River (Namaqualand) to Kei River)[3][4]
- Clinus exasperatus Holleman, von der Heyden & Zsilavecz, 2012, (Betty's Bay)[34]
- Helen's klipfish Clinus helenae (Smith, 1946) (Boknes (west of Port Alfred) to Bashee River)[3]
- West coast klipfish Clinus heterodon Valenciennes, 1836 (Orange River to Cape Agulhas)[4](Swakopmund to False Bay)[3]
- False Bay klipfish Clinus latipennis Valenciennes, 1836 (Table Bay to Cape Agulhas)[3]
- Mosaic klipfish, Clinus musaicus Holleman, von der Heyden & Zsilavecz, 2012, (TMNP MPA).[36][34]
- Chinese klipfish Clinus nematopterus Günther, 1861 (False Bay and Algoa Bay)[3]
- Ornate klipfish, Clinus ornatus Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908, (TMNP MPA),[36] also previously recorded in C. superciliosus complex.[34]
- Robust klipfish Clinus robustus Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908 (Cape of Good Hope to East London)[3]
- Kelp klipfish Clinus rotundifrons Barnard, 1937 (Lüderitz Bay to Cape of Good Hope)[3]
- Bot river klipfish Clinus spatulatus Bennett, 1983 (Bot River and Kleinmond estuary)[3]
- Super klipfish or Highfin klipfish Clinus superciliosus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Namibia (18°59'S) to Kei River)[3][4][36] now recognised as a complex containing C. superciliosus, C. ornatus, C. arborescens, C. musaicus and C. exasperatus.
- Bull klipfish Clinus taurus Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908 (Möwe Point (Namibia) to Port Alfred)[3]
- Speckled klipfish Clinus venustris Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908 (Orange River to East London)[4](Lüderitz Bay to Port Alfred)[3]
- Oldman klipfish Clinus woodi Smith, 1946 (Kei River to Inhambane)[3]
- Mousey klipfish Fucomimus mus (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (False Bay to Coffee Bay)[3]
- Nosestripe klipfish Muraenoclinus dorsalis (Bleeker, 1860) (Orange River to Durban)[4](Lüderitz Bay to southern Natal)[3]
- Bluespotted klipfish, Pavoclinus caeruleopunctatus Zsilavecz, 2001, (TMNP MPA).[36][37]
- Grass klipfish Pavoclinus graminis (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (False Bay to Inhambane)[3][4]
- Rippled klipfish Pavoclinus laurentii (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Port Elizabeth to Maputo)[4] (Port Alfred to Inhambane)[3]
- Slinky klipfish Pavoclinus litorafontis Penrith, 1965 (False Bay; Strandfontein intertidal caulerpa beds, and Onrust river mouth)[3]
- Bearded klipfish Pavoclinus mentalis (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Algoa Bay to St. Lucia)[3]
- Mya's Klipfish Pavoclinus myae Christensen, 1978 (East London to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Peacock klipfish Pavoclinus pavo (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Lüderitz Bay to Kei River)[3]
- Deepwater klipfish Pavoclinus profundus Smith, 1961 (Off Knysna to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Deep reef klipfish Pavoclinus smalei Heemstra & Wright, 1986 (off Storms River mouth)[3]
- Leafy klipfish Smithichthys fucorum (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Cape Point to Bashee River)[3]
- Platanna klipfish Xenopoclinus kochi Smith, 1948 (Lambert's Bay to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Leprous platanna klipfish Xenopoclinus leprosus Smith, 1961 (Orange River mouth to Algoa Bay)[3]
Family: Tripterygiidae – Threefin blennies or Triplefins
- Cape triplefin Cremnochorites capensis (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (False Bay to Port Alfred)[3][4]
- Yellow triplefin Enneapterygius abeli (Klausewitz, 1960) (Red Sea to northern Natal)[3]
- Barred triplefin Enneapterygius clarkae (Holleman, 1982) (Red Sea to Natal)[3]
- Highcrest triplefin Enneapterygius pusillus Rüppell, 1835 (Red Sea to northern Natal)[3]
- Blotched triplefin Enneapterygius ventermaculus Holleman, 1982 (Natal to Pakistan)[3]
- Blackfin triplefin Helcogramma fuscopinna Holleman, 1982 (Indian Ocean south to Durban)[3]
- Hotlips triplefin Helcogramma obtusirostris (Klunzinger, 1871) (Red Sea to Coffee Bay)[3][4]
- Rough-head triplefin, Norfolkia brachylepis (Schultz, 1960) recorded as syn. Norfolkia springeri Clark, 1979 (Natal to Red Sea)[3][38]
Order: Callionymiformes
[edit]Family: Callionymidae – Dragonets
- Longtail dragonet, Callionymus gardineri Regan, 1908 (Indian Ocean south to Natal)[3]
- Sand dragonet, Callionymus marleyi Regan, 1919 (Cape of Good Hope eastward to Persian Gulf)[3]
- Dainty dragonet Draculo celetus (Smith, 1963) (Known only from Eastern Cape, Durban and Inhaca island)[3]
- Ladder dragonet Paracallionymus costatus (Boulenger, 1898) (Lüderitz Bay to Inhaca)[3]
- Deep-water dragonet Synchiropus monacanthus Smith, 1935 (Port Alfred to Zanzibar)[3]
- Dwarf dragonet Synchiropus postulus Smith, 1963 (Sodwana Bay to Tanzania)[3]
- Starry dragonet, Synchiropus stellatus Smith, 1963 (Sodwana Bay to northern Mozambique)[3]
Order Carangaria incertae sedis
[edit]Family: Menidae – Moonfish
- Moonfish Mene maculata (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) (Tropical Indo Pacific south to Durban)[3]
Family: Polynemidae – Threadfins
- Indian threadfin, Leptomelanosoma indicum (Shaw, 1804), recorded as syn. Polydactylus indicus (Shaw, 1804) (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3][39]
- Striped threadfin Polydactylus plebeius (Broussonet, 1782) (Red Sea to Knysna)[3]
- Sixfinger threadfin Polydactylus sextarius (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) (Indo-West Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3]
Family: Sphyraenidae – Barracudas
- Sharpfin barracuda Sphyraena acutipinnis Day, 1876 (Indo-Pacific south to Mossel Bay)[3]
- Great barracuda, Sphyraena barracuda (Edwards, 1771) (Natal and all tropical seas except eastern Pacific)[3][4]
- Yellowstripe barracuda Sphyraena chrysotaenia Klunzinger, 1884 (Indo-Pacific south to East London)[3]
- Yellowtail barracuda, Sphyraena flavicauda Rüppell, 1838 (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Pickhandle barracuda, Sphyraena jello Cuvier, 1829 (Western Indian Ocean south to Knysna)[3][4]
- Sawtooth barracuda Sphyraena putnamiae Jordan & Seale, 1905 (Red Sea to Natal)[3]
- Blackfin barracuda, Sphyraena qenie Klunzinger, 1870 (Indo-Pacific, reported from Natal)[3]
Order Carangiformes
[edit]Family: Carangidae – Kingfishes
- Threadfin mirrorfish or African pompano, Alectis ciliaris (Bloch 1787) (Algoa Bay northwards, cicumtropical)[3]
- Indian mirrorfish or Indian threadfish Alectis indica (Rüppell, 1830) (Durban northwards throughout Indian Ocean)[3]
- Shrimp scad, Alepes djedaba (Forsskål, 1775) (Durban northwards to Red Sea)[3]
- Longfin kingfish, longfin trevally, Carangoides armatus (Rüppell, 1830) (East London northwards throughout Indian Ocean to Gulf of Thailand and Japan)[3]
- Longnose kingfish, longnose trevally, Carangoides chrysophrys (Cuvier, 1833) (Algoa Bay northward, and eastward to Japan and Australia)[3]
- Coastal kingfish, coastal trevally, Carangoides coeruleopinnatus (Rüppell, 1830) (Durban northwards, and eastwards to Japan and Australia)[3][4]
- Shadow kingfish, shadow trevally, Carangoides dinema Bleeker, 1851 (Durban northward to Tanzania)[3]
- Whitefin kingfish, whitefin trevally, Carangoides equula (Temminck & Schlegel, 1844) (Algoa Bay northward to Somalia and Gulf of Oman)[3]
- Blue kingfish, blue trevally, Carangoides ferdau (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Port Elizabeth)[3][4]
- Yellowspotted kingfish, yellowspotted trevally, Carangoides fulvoguttatus (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3][4]
- Bludger, Carangoides gymnostethus (Cuvier, 1833) (Indo-West Pacific to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Bumpnose kingfish, bumpnose trevally, Carangoides hedlandensis (Whitley, 1934) (Durban northwards in coastal waters)[3]
- Malabar kingfish, malabar trevally, Carangoides malabaricus (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Coachwhip kingfish, coachwhip trevally, Carangoides oblongus (Cuvier, 1833) (Western Indian Ocean south to Durban)[3]
- Barcheek kingfish, barcheek trevally, Carangoides plagiotaenia (Bleeker, 1857) (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Blacktip kingfish, blacktip trevally, Caranx heberi (Bennett, 1830), also reported as syn. Caranx sem Cuvier, 1833, (Durban north to Zanzibar)[3][4]
- Giant kingfish, giant trevally, Caranx ignobilis (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Port Elizabeth)[3][4]
- Black kingfish Caranx lugubris Poey, 1860 (Circumtropical. Taken off East London)[3]
- Bluefin kingfish, bluefin trevally, Caranx melampygus Cuvier, 1833 (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3][4]
- Brassy kingfish, brassy trevally, Caranx papuensis Alleyne & Macleay, 1877 (Port Alfred north to Zanzibar)[3]
- Bigeye kingfish, bigeye trevally, Caranx sexfasciatus Quoy & Gaimard, 1825 (Tropical Ind-Pacific south to Natal)[4]
- Tille kingfish, tille trevally, Caranx tille Cuvier, 1833 (Durban north to Zanzibar)[3]
- Mackerel scad, Decapterus macarellus (Cuvier, 1833) (Knysna northward, Circumtropical)[3]
- Slender scad Decapterus macrosoma Bleeker, 1851 (Indo-Pacific south to Knysna)[3]
- Indian scad Decapterus russelli (Rüppell, 1830) (Durban northwards to Japan and Australia)[3]
- Rainbow runner, Elagatis bipinnulata (Quoy & Gaimard, 1825) (Durban northwards, Circumtropical)[3]
- Golden kingfish, golden trevally, Gnathanodon speciosus (Forsskål, 1775), also recorded as syn. Gnathodon speciosus, (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Northern KwaZulu-Natal)[3][4]
- Leervis, leerfish, or garrick, Lichia amia (Linnaeus, 1758) (Mediterranean sea south along west coast of Africa and around Cape to Delagoa Bay)[3][4]
- Torpedo scad, Megalaspis cordyla (Linnaeus, 1758) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to East London)[3]
- Pilot fish Naucrates ductor (Linnaeus, 1758) (Circumtropical, common throughout Indian Ocean)[3]
- White kingfish, white trevally, Pseudocaranx dentex (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) (Durban southwards, anti-tropical on both sides of Atlantic, Mediterranean, Indo-West Pacific)[3]
- Talang queenfish Scomberoides commersonnianus Lacepède, 1801 (Indian Ocean south to Port Elizabeth)[3][4]
- Doublespotted queenfish Scomberoides lysan (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Needlescaled queenfish Scomberoides tol (Cuvier, 1832) (Indian Ocean south to Natal)[3]
- Greater yellowtail or greater amberjack Seriola dumerili Risso, 1810 (Algoa Bay to Persian Gulf)[3]
- Giant yellowtail, yellowtail amberjack, Seriola lalandi Valenciennes, 1833 (Most common on Atlantic Cape waters, but follows the pilchard migration to Transkei and Natal. Circumglobal in subtropical waters)[3][4]
- Longfin yellowtail Seriola rivoliana Valenciennes, 1833 (Knysna northward. Circumtropical entering temperate waters in some places)[3]
- Blackbanded kingfish, black-banded trevally, Seriolina nigrofasciata (Rüppell, 1829) (Indian Ocean south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Southern pompano Trachinotus africanus Smith, 1967 (Knysna to Delagoa Bay)[3][4]
- Smallspotted pompano, smallspotted dart, Trachinotus baillonii (Lacepède, 1801) (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Snubnose pompano Trachinotus blochii (Lacepède, 1801) (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Largespotted pompano Trachinotus botla (Shaw, 1803) (Algoa Bay to Kenya)[3][4]
- African maasbanker, Atlantic horse mackerel, Trachurus delagoa Nekrasov, 1970 (Eastern Cape province to Mozambique)[3]
- Maasbanker Trachurus trachurus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Norway south and round the Cape of Good Hope to Delagoa Bay[4]
- Cottonmouth kingfish, cottonmouth jack, Uraspis secunda (Poey, 1860) (Algoa Bay)[3]
Family: Coryphaenidae – Dolphinfish or Dorades
- Dolphinfish Coryphaena hippurus Linnaeus, 1758 (all tropical and subtropical waters to 35°S)[3]
Family: Echeneidae – Remoras
- Shark remora Echeneis naucrates Linnaeus, 1758 (Namibia to Mozambique)[4] (all warm waters except eastern Pacific)[3]
- Slender remora Phtheirichthys lineatus (Menzies, 1791) (Worldwide in tropical and subtropical waters)[3]
- White remora Remora albescens (Temminck & Schlegel, 1850) (Worldwide, prefers Manta rays)[40]
- Whale remora Remora australis (Bennett, 1840) (Worldwide, pelagic: found only on cetaceans)[3]
- Spearfish remora Remora brachyptera (Lowe, 1839) (Worldwide, prefers billfishes)[3]
- Remora Remora remora (Linnaeus, 1758) (Worldwide, prefers sharks)[3]
Family: Istiophoridae – Sailfish, spearfishes and marlins
- Sailfish, Indo-Pacific sailfish, Istiophorus platypterus (Shaw, 1792) (Mossel Bay to Mozambique)[3][4]
- Black marlin, Istiompax indica (Cuvier, 1832), recorded as syn. Makaira indica (Cuvier, 1832) (Primarily Indo-Pacific to off Cape of Good Hope)[3][41]
- White marlin, Kajikia albida (Poey, 1860), recorded as syn. Tetrapturus albidus Poey, 1861 (Atlantic Ocean)[3][42]
- Striped marlin, Kajikia audax (Philippi, 1887), recorded as syn. Tetrapturus audax (Philippi, 1887) (Primarily Indo-Pacific, but have been caught off Cape Town)[3][43]
- Blue marlin, Makaira nigricans (Lacepède, 1802) (Worldwide in all oceans)[3]
- Shortbill spearfish Tetrapturus angustirostris Tanaka, 1915, (Off Cape Point and Durban northwards throughout Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Longbill spearfish Tetrapturus pfluegeri Robins & de Sylva, 1963 (Apparently restricted to the Atlantic Ocean)[3]
Family: Rachycentridae – Cobia
- Prodigal son, cobia, Rachycentron canadum (Linnaeus, 1766) (Warm waters of the Atlantic and Indo-Pacific, occasionally reaching False Bay) [3]
Family: Xiphiidae – Swordfishes
- Swordfish Xiphias gladius Linnaeus, 1758 (Namibia to Natal)[3]
Order Centrarchiformes
[edit]Family: Cheilodactylidae – Fingerfins[44]
- Redfingers, Cheilodactylus fasciatus Lacepède, 1803 (Kunene river, Namibia to Durban)[3][4]
- Barred fingerfin, Cheilodactylus pixi Smith, 1980 (Knysna to Coffee Bay)[3][4](False Bay to Coffee Bay)[45]
- Twotone fingerfin, Chirodactylus brachydactylus (Cuvier, 1830) (Walvis Bay to Delagoa Bay)[3][4]
- Bank steenbras Chirodactylus grandis (Günther, 1860) (Walvis Bay to possibly Natal)[3][4]
- Natal fingerfin Chirodactylus jessicalenorum Smith, 1980 (Coffee Bay Transkei to Sodwana Bay)[3][4]
Family: Cirrhitidae – Hawkfishes[46]
- Twospot hawkfish, Amblycirrhitus bimacula (Jenkins, 1903) (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Spotted hawkfish, coral hawkfish, Cirrhitichthys oxycephalus (Bleeker, 1855) (Indo-Pacific south to East London)[3][4]
- Marbled hawkfish Cirrhitus pinnulatus (Schneider, 1801) (Indo-Pacific south to Port Alfred)[3]
- Blackspotted hawkfish, Cristacirrhitus punctatus (Cuvier, 1829), recorded as syn. Cirrhitus punctatus (Cuvier, 1829) (Mauritius, Madagascar, Mozanbique and South Africa south to Bizana)[3][47]
- Swallowtail hawkfish, Cyprinocirrhites polyactis (Bleeker, 1875) (East Africa south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Horseshoe hawkfish, arc-eye hawkfish, Paracirrhites arcatus (Cuvier, 1829) (Indo-Pacific south to the Transkei)[3]
- Freckled hawkfish, blackside hawkfish, Paracirrhites forsteri (Schneider, 1801) (Indo-Pacific south to Northern KwaZulu-Natal)[4]
Family: Dichistiidae – Galjoens
- Galjoen, Dichistius capensis (Cuvier, 1831) (Southern Angola to Sodwana Bay)[3][4] (syn. Coracinus capensis)
- Banded galjoen, Dichistius multifasciatus (Pellegrin, 1914) (Port Alfred to Mozambique)[4] (Still Bay to Madagascar)[3] (syn. Coracinus multifaciatus)
Family: Kuhliidae – Flagtails
- Barred flagtail, Kuhlia mugil (Forster in Bloch and Schneider, 1801)[48](Cape Agulhas to Indo-Pacific)[3][4]
- Rock flagtail, Kuhlia rupestris (Lacepède, 1802) (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3]
Family: Kyphosidae – Sea chubs
- Grey chub, Kyphosus bigibbus Lacepède, 1801 (Red Sea to Cape Point)[3][4]
- Blue chub, Kyphosus cinerescens (Forsskål, 1775) (Read Sea to East London)[3]
- Brassy chub, Kyphosus vaigiensis (Quoy & Gaimard, 1825) (Indo-Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Stone bream, Neoscorpis lithophilus (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (False Bay to southern Mozambique)[3][4]
Family: Oplegnathidae – Knifejaws
- Cape knifejaw Oplegnathus conwayi Richardson, 1840 (False Bay to Durban)[3][4]
- Natal knifejaw Oplegnathus robinsoni Regan, 1916 (Central KwaZulu-Natal to Mozambique)[3][4]
Family: Parascorpididae – Jutjaw
Family: Terapontidae – Thornfishes
- Trumpeter Pelates quadrilineatus (Bloch, 1790) (tropical Indo-Pacific south to Transkei)[3]
- Thornfish Terapon jarbua (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific to Knysna)[3][4]
- Straight lined thornfish Terapon theraps (Cuvier, 1829) (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3]
Order Cichliformes
[edit]Family: Cichlidae – Cichlids
- Mozambique tilapia, Oreochromis mossambicus (Peters, 1852) (Estuaries and rivers from Bushmans River north)[3]
Order Clupeiformes
[edit]Family: Alosidae
- Pilchard or Sardine Sardinops sagax (Jenyns, 1842) (Namibia to Mozambique)[3][4][49]
Family: Chirocentridae – Wolfherrings
- Wolfherring, dorab wolf-herring, Chirocentrus dorab (Forsskål, 1775) (Durban to Mozambique)[3][4]
Family: Dorosomatidae
- Blueline herring, bluestripe herring, Herklotsichthys quadrimaculatus (Rüppell, 1837) (Algoa Bay to Indo-Pacific)[3][50]
- Razorbelly or Kelee shad, Hilsa kelee (Cuvier, 1829) (Transkei to Mozambique and Indo-Pacific)[3][4][51]
- Gizzard shad Nematalosa nasus (Bloch, 1795) (off Durban Bay; Gulf of Aden to Hong Kong)[3][52]
Family: Dussumieriidae – Round herrings
- East coast roundherring, or red-eye round herring, Etrumeus sadina (Mitchill, 1814), recorded as syn. Etrumeus teres (De Kay, 1842) (Durban to Mozambique border)[3][53]
- Roundherring, Whitehead's round herring, Etrumeus whiteheadi Wongratana, 1983 (Walvis Bay to KwaZulu-Natal)[3][4]
Family: Ehiravidae
- Estuarine round herring, Gilchrist's round-herring, Gilchristella aestuaria (Gilchrist, 1913) (Knysna to Kosi bay, Saldanha Bay and possibly north to Orange River mouth)[3][4][54]
Family: Engraulidae – Anchovies
- Buccaneer anchovy, Encrasicholina punctifer Fowler, 1938, recorded as syn. Stolephorus punctifer (Fowler, 1938) (St Lucia, possibly Durban, to Indo-Pacific to Hawaii)[3][55]
- Cape anchovy, Japanese anchovy, Engraulis japonicus Temminck & Schlegel, 1846 (Walvis Bay to Mozambique and Indo-Pacific)[3][4]
- Thorny anchovy, Natal anchovy, Stolephorus holodon (Boulenger, 1900) (Swartkops estuary to northern Mozambique)[3]
- Indian anchovy Stolephorus indicus (van Hasselt, 1823) (Natal to Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Longjaw glassnose Thryssa setirostris (Broussonet, 1782) (Transkei through Indian Ocean to Indonesia and China)[3]
- Orangemouth glassnose or Bony Thryssa vitrirostris (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Port Elizabeth to Mozambique)[4]
- Family: Pristigasteridae
- Indian pellona, Pellona ditchela Valenciennes 1847 (Durban to Indo-Pacific)[3][56]
- White sardinelle, Sardinella albella (Valenciennes 1847) (Durban to Indo-Pacific, possibly East London)[3][57]
- Round sardinella, Sardinella aurita Valenciennes, 1847 (Walvis Bay to Saldanha Bay)[3]
- Goldstripe sardinella, Sardinella gibbosa (Bleeker, 1849) (Port Alfred to Mozambique)[3][4]
Family: Spratelloididae
- Delicate roundherring Spratelloides delicatulus (Bennett, 1831) (Zululand to Indo-Pacific)[3][58]
Order Dactylopteriformes
[edit]Family: Dactylopteridae – Helmet gurnards
- Helmet gurnard , oriental flying gurnard, Dactyloptena orientalis (Cuvier, 1829) (Port Elizabeth northwards; east to central Pacific)[3]
- Starry helmet gurnard Dactyloptena peterseni (Nyström, 1887) (East London and Delagoa Bay)[3]
Family: Pegasidae – Seamoths
- Seamoth, little dragonfish, Eurypegasus draconis (Linnaeus, 1766) (Indo-West Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Longtail seamoth, Pegasus volitans Linnaeus, 1758 (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
Order Elopiformes
[edit]Family: Elopidae – Ladyfishes
- Atlantic ladyfish, West African ladyfish, Elops lacerta Valenciennes, 1846 (Atlantic coast to 23°S)[3]
- Ladyfish or Springer Elops machnata (Forsskål, 1775) (Mossel Bay to Mozambique)[3][4]
Family: Megalopidae – Tarpons
- Oxeye tarpon, Indo-Pacific tarpon, Megalops cyprinoides (Broussonet, 1782) (Port Alfred to Mozambique)[3][4]
Order Eupercaria incertae sedis
[edit]Family: Callanthiidae – Goldies
- Goldie, Callanthias legras Smith, 1947 (Dassen Island (Western Cape) to Natal)[3]
Family: Caesionidae – Fusiliers
- Blue-and-gold fusilier, Caesio caerulaurea Lacepède, 1801 (Port Elizabeth to Mozambique)[4]
- Lunar fusilier, Caesio lunaris Ehrenberg, 1830 (Red Sea south to Natal)[3]
- Beautiful fusilier, Caesio teres Seale, 1906 (Sodwana Bay to Kenya)[3]
- Yellowback fusilier, Caesio xanthonota Bleeker, 1853 (Indian Ocean south to Sodwana Bay)[3][4]
- Dark-banded fusilier, Pterocaesio tile Cuvier, 1830 (East Africa south to Sodwana Bay, juvenile found at Haga Haga just north of East London)[3]
Family: Cepolidae – Bandfishes
- Bandfish Acanthocepola indica (Day, 1888) (Occasionally taken by trawl in coastal waters from Natal to Japan)[3][59]
- Owstonia weberi (Gilchrist, 1922) (Natal to Kenya)[3]
Family: Dinopercidae
- Cavebass Dinoperca petersi (Day, 1875) (Port Elizabeth to Mozambique)[3][4]
Family: Emmelichthyidae – Rovers
- Southern rover, Emmelichthys nitidus Richardson 1845 (occasionally taken off western Cape coast)[3]
- Japanese rubyfish, Erythrocles schlegelii (Richardson, 1846) (one specimen from off Durban)[3]
- Rubyfish, Plagiogeneion rubiginosum (Hutton, 1875) (off Algoa Bay, off Vema Seamount)[3]
Family: Gerreidae – Pursemouths
- Threadfin pursemouth Gerres filamentosus Cuvier, 1829 (Indo-Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Smallscale pursemouth Gerres longirostris (Lacepède, 1801) (Port Elizabeth to Mozambique)[3][4](syn. Gerres acinaces)
- Oblong pursemouth, slender silver-biddy, Gerres oblongus Cuvier, 1830 (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Kosi Bay)[3]
- Slenderspine pursemouth, common silver-biddy, Gerres oyena (Forsskål, 1775) (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Kosi Bay)[3]
- Evenfin pursemouth, striped silverbiddy, Gerres methueni Regan, 1920, recorded as syn. Gerres rappi (Barnard, 1927) (Algoa Bay to southern Mozambique)[3][60]
Family: Haemulidae – Rubberlips and grunters
- Sailfin rubberlip, painted sweetlips, Diagramma pictum (Thunberg, 1792) (Indo-West Pacific to south Natal)[3]
- Dusky rubberlip Plectorhinchus chubbi (Regan, 1919) (Transkei to Kenya and India)[3][4]
- Lemonfish Plectorhinchus flavomaculatus (Ehrenberg, 1830) (Transkei to Red Sea)[3]
- Blackspotted rubberlip Plectorhinchus gaterinus (Forsskål, 1775) (Natal to Red Sea)[3]
- Harry hotlips Plectorhinchus gibbosus (Lacepède, 1802) (Indo-West Pacific, south to Natal)[3]
- Barred rubberlip Plectorhinchus plagiodesmus Fowler, 1935 (Somalia to Madagascar and Natal)[3]
- Whitebarred rubberlip Plectorhinchus playfairi (Pellegrin, 1914) (Western Indian Ocean to Port St. Johns)[3][4]
- Minstrel Plectorhinchus schotaf (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Port St. Johns)[3]
- Redlip rubberlip Plectorhinchus sordidus (Klunzinger, 1870) (Red Sea to Transkei)[3]
- Spotted grunter Pomadasys commersonnii (Lacepède, 1801) (False Bay to India)[3][4]
- Grey grunter Pomadasys furcatus (Bloch and Schneider, 1801) (Madagascar to Natal, rare south of Durban)[3]
- Javelin grunter Pomadasys kaakan (Cuvier, 1830) (Indo-Pacific south to Transkei)[3][4]
- Saddle grunter Pomadasys maculatus (Bloch, 1797) (Indo-West Pacific south to Transkei)[3]
- Cock grunter Pomadasys multimaculatus (Playfair, 1866) (Algoa Bay to Zanzibar)[3]
- Pinky or Piggy Pomadasys olivaceus (Day, 1875) (Cape Agulhas to Mozambique)[4]
- Striped grunter Pomadasys striatus (Gilchrist and Thompson, 1908) (Knysna to Beira)[3][4]
- Lined piggy Pomadasys stridens (Forsskål, 1775) (Red Sea to Natal)[3]
Family: Labridae – Wrasses
- Bluespotted tamarin, blue-spotted wrasse, Anampses caeruleopunctatus Rüppell, 1829 (Red Sea to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Lined tamarin, lined wrasse, Anampses lineatus Randall, 1972 (Red Sea south to Natal)[3]
- Yellowtail tamarin, spotted wrasse, Anampses meleagrides Valenciennes, 1840 (Red Sea south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Natal wrasse, Anchichoerops natalensis (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Known only from Natal and Transkei)[3]
- Lyretail hogfish, Bodianus anthioides (Bennett, 1830) (Red Sea south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Turncoat hogfish Bodianus axillaris (Bennett, 1831) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Saddleback hogfish Bodianus bilunulatus (Lacepède, 1801) (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3][4]
- Diana's hogfish, Bodianus diana (Lacepède, 1801) (Port Elizabeth northwards)[4](Indo-Pacific south to Transkei)[3]
- Lined hogfish Bodianus leucosticticus (Bennett, 1831) (Somalia south to Natal)[3]
- Goldsaddle hogfish Bodianus perditio (Quoy & Gaimard, 1834) (Northern Mozambique to Natal)[3]
- Floral wrasse, Cheilinus chlorourus (Bloch, 1791) (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Snooty wrasse, Cheilinus oxycephalus (Bleeker, 1853) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Tripletail wrasse, Cheilinus trilobatus Lacepéde, 1801 (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Cigar wrasse, Cheilio inermis (Forsskål, 1775) (Red sea south to Transkei)[3]
- Exquisite wrasse, Cirrhilabrus exquisitus Smith, 1957 (East Africa south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Clown coris, Coris aygula Lacepéde, 1801 (Indo-Pacific south to Transkei)[3]
- Spottail coris Coris caudimacula (Quoy & Gaimard, 1834) (Red Sea south to East London)[3]
- Queen coris, Coris formosa (Bennett, 1830) (Indian Ocean south to Durban)[3]
- African coris, Coris cuvieri (Bennett, 1831), recorded as syn. Coris gaimard africana Smith, 1957 (Western Indian Ocean to 30°S)[3][61]
- Knife wrasse Cymolutes praetextatus (Quoy & Gaimard, 1834) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Birdfish Gomphosus caeruleus Lacepède, 1801 (Port Alfred northwards)[4](Indian Ocean south to southern Natal)[3]
- Adorned wrasse Halichoeres cosmetus Randall and Smith, 1982 (Western Indian Ocean south to Aliwal Shoal)[3]
- Bubblefin wrasse, Halichoeres nigrescens (Bloch & Schneider, 1801), recorded as syn. Halichoeres dussumieri (Valenciennes, 1839) (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3][62]
- Checkerboard wrasse, Halichoeres hortulanus (Lacepède, 1801) (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3][4]
- Rainbow wrasse Halichoeres iridis Randall & Smith 1982 (East African coast to Natal (30°S))[3]
- Jewelled wrasse Halichoeres lapillus Smith, 1947 (Mauritius, Madagascar and southern Mozambique to Natal)[3]
- Picture wrasse, nebulous wrasse, Halichoeres nebulosus (Valenciennes, 1839) (Indo-West Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3][4]
- Zigzag sand wrasse Halichoeres scapularis(Bennett, 1831) (Red Sea to Natal)[3]
- Ringed wrasse Hologymnosus doliatus (Lacepéde, 1801) (Central Pacific to East Africa and south to southern Natal)[3]
- Bicoloured cleaner wrasse Labroides bicolor Fowler and Bean, 1928 (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Bluestreak cleaner wrasse, Labroides dimidiatus (Valenciennes, 1839) (Indo-Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3][4]
- Divided wrasse Macropharyngodon bipartitus Smith, 1957 (Western Indian Ocean south to Natal)[3]
- Bluespotted wrasse Macropharyngodon cyanoguttatus Randall, 1978 (Known only from Mauritius, Reunion and north coast of Natal)[3]
- Madagascar wrasse Macropharyngodon vivienae Randall, 1978 (Known only from Madagascar and Natal coast south to Durban)[3]
- Seagrass wrasse, Novaculoides macrolepidotus (Bloch, 1791), recorded as syn. Novaculichthys macrolepidotus (Bloch 1791), (Red Sea south to Durban)[3][63]
- Rockmover wrasse Novaculichthys taeniourus (Lacepéde, 1801) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Two-spot wrasse, Oxycheilinus bimaculatus (Valenciennes, 1840), recorded as syn. Cheilinus bimaculatus Valenciennes, 1840 (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3][64]
- Cheek-lined wrasse, Oxycheilinus digramma (Lacepède, 1801), recorded as Cheilinus digrammus (Lacepède, 1801) (Red Sea south to Natal)[3][65]
- Striated wrasse, Pseudocheilinus evanidus (Jenkins, 1901) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Sixstripe wrasse, six-line wrasse, Pseudocheilinus hexataenia (Bleeker, 1857) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Eightstripe wrasse, eight-lined wrasse, Pseudocheilinus octotaenia Jenkins, 1900 (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Chiseltooth wrasse, Pseudodax moluccanus (Valenciennes, 1839) (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Smalltail wrasse Pseudojuloides cerasinus (Snyder, 1904) (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Cocktail wrasse Pteragogus flagellifer (Valenciennes, 1839) (Indian Ocean south to Natal)[3]
- Sideburn wrasse Pteragogus pelycus Randall, 1981 (Western Indian Ocean south to Durban)[3]
- Bluelined wrasse Stethojulis albovittata Bonnaterre, 1788 (Red Sea to Natal)[3]
- Cutribbon wrasse Stethojulis interrupta (Bleeker, 1851) (Western Pacific to East Africa and south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Three-ribbon wrasse Stethojulis strigiventer (Bennett, 1832) (Central Pacific to east Africa and south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Twotone wrasse Thalassoma amblycephalum (Bleeker, 1856) (Indo-Pacific south to Transkei)[3]
- Red-cheek wrasse, Thalassoma genivittatum (Valenciennes, 1839) (Mauritius and Natal, where it is known from Aliwal Shoal)[3]
- Sixbar wrasse, Thalassoma hardwicke (Bennett, 1828) (Indo-Pacific south to Bashee River)[3]
- Goldbar wrasse, Thalassoma hebraicum (Lacepède, 1801) (Indian Ocean south to Algoa Bay)[4]
- Crescent-tail wrasse, moon wrasse, Thalassoma lunare (Linnaeus, 1758) Indo-Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Rainbow wrasse or surge wrasse, Thalassoma purpureum (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3][4]
- Fivestripe wrasse, Thalassoma quinquevittatum (Lay and Bennett, 1839) (Indo-Pacific south to Transkei (32°S))[3]
- Ladder wrasse, Christmas wrasse, Thalassoma trilobatum (Lacepéde, 1801) (Indo-Pacific south to Transkei)[3]
- Pearly razorfish Xyrichtys novacula (Linnaeus, 1758) (Both sides of the Atlantic, 1 doubtful record from Cape of Good Hope)[3]
- Peacock wrasse, Iniistius pavo (Valenciennes, 1840), recorded as syn. Xyrichtys pavo Valenciennes, 1840 (Red sea to Natal)[3][66]
- Fivefinger wrasse, Iniistius pentadactylus (Linnaeus, 1758), recorded as syn. Xyrichtys pentadactylus (Linnaeus 1758), (Red Sea to Natal)[3][67]
Family: Lethrinidae – Emperors
- Glowfish Gnathodentex aureolineatus (Lacepède, 1802) (Indo-West Pacific to Durban)[3][4]
- Grey barenose Gymnocranius griseus (Temminck & Schlegel, 1843) (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3][4]
- Rippled barenose, Gymnocranius grandoculis (Valenciennes, 1830), recorded as syn. Gymnocranius robinsoni (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3][68]
- Yellowfin emperor Lethrinus crocineus (Smith, 1959) (Western Indian Ocean south to Natal)[3]
- Longnose emperor, Lethrinus microdon Valenciennes, 1830, recorded as syn. Lethrinus elongatus Valenciennes, 1830, (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3][69]
- Blackspot emperor Lethrinus harak (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Redspot emperor Lethrinus lentjan (Lacepède, 1802) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3][4]
- Sky emperor Lethrinus mahsena (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Snubnose emperor, Lethrinus lentjan (Lacepède, 1802), recorded as syn. Lethrinus mahsenoides Valenciennes, 1830 (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3][70]
- Blue emperor Lethrinus nebulosus (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific to Algoa Bay)[3][4]
- Orange striped emperor, Lethrinus obsoletus (Forsskål, 1775), recorded as syn. Lethrinus ramak (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific to Natal)[3][71]
- Spotcheek emperor Lethrinus rubrioperculatus Sato, 1978 (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Cutthroat emperor, Lethrinus mahsena (Forsskål, 1775), recorded as syn. Lethrinus sanguineus Smith, 1955 (Western Indian Ocean south to Sodwana Bay)[3][72]
- Variegated emperor Lethrinus variegatus Ehrenberg, 1830 (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Bigeye barenose Monotaxis grandoculis (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3][4]
Family: Lutjanidae – Snappers
- Blue smalltooth job Aphareus furca (Forsskål, 1775) (Tropical Indo-Pacific to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Red smalltooth job Aphareus rutilans Cuvier, 1830 (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Kaakap or Green jobfish Aprion virescens Valenciennes, 1830 (Central KwaZulu-Natal to Mozambique)[3][4]
- Ruby snapper Etelis coruscans Valenciennes, 1862 (Tropical/subtropical Indo-Pacific south to Bashee River)[3]
- River snapper Lutjanus argentimaculatus (Forsskål, 1775) (Red sea and tropical Indo-Pacific south to East London)[3][4]
- Twinspot snapper Lutjanus bohar (Forsskål, 1775) (Red Sea and tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3][4]
- Blackspot snapper Lutjanus ehrenbergii (Peters, 1869) (Red Sea and tropical Indo-West pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Dory snapper Lutjanus fulviflamma (Forsskål, 1775) (Red Sea and tropical Indo-West Pacific south to East London)[3]
- Yellow striped snapper Lutjanus fulvus (Schneider, 1801) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Bashee River)[3]
- Humpback snapper Lutjanus gibbus (Forsskål, 1775) (Red Sea and tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3][4]
- Bluebanded snapper Lutjanus kasmira (Forsskål, 1775) (Red Sea and tropical Indo-West Pacific south to East London)[3][4]
- Sweetlip snapper Lutjanus lemniscatus (Valenciennes, 1828) (Tropical Indian Ocean to Durban)[3]
- Bluestriped snapper Lutjanus notatus (Cuvier, 1828) (East African coast south to Durban)[3]
- Speckled snapper Lutjanus rivulatus (Cuvier, 1828) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Russell's snapper Lutjanus russellii (Bleeker, 1849) (Central KwaZulu-Natal to Mozambique)[4]
- Blood snapper Lutjanus sanguineus (Cuvier, 1828) (Western Indian Ocean south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Emperor snapper Lutjanus sebae (Cuvier, 1816) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Black beauty Macolor niger (Forsskål, 1775) (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay, 1 juvenile from Durban) [3]
- Yellowtail fuselier Paracaesio xanthura (Bleeker, 1869) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Rosy jobfish Pristipomoides filamentosus (Day, 1870) (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to East London)[3]
Family: Malacanthidae – Tilefishes
- Ribbed tilefish Branchiostegus doliatus (Cuvier, 1830) (Durban to Maputo)[3]
- Spotted tilefish Branchiostegus sawakinensis Amirthalingam, 1969 (Off Durban; Red sea)[3]
- Forktail tilefish Hoplolatilus fronticinctus (Günther, 1887) (Postlarvae collected off Cape Peninsula; India and Western Pacific)[3]
- Stripetail filefish Malacanthus brevirostris Guichenot, 1848 (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay. Postlarvae drift to near Port Alfred)[3]
Family: Monodactylidae – Moonies
- Natal moony Monodactylus argenteus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Red Sea to Cape Infanta)[3][4]
- Cape moony Monodactylus falciformis Lacepède, 1801 (Red Sea to False Bay)[3][4]
Family: Nemipteridae – Butterfly breams, spinecheeks
- Silverflash spinecheek Scolopsis vosmeri (Bloch, 1792) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
Family: Priacanthidae – Bigeyes
- Bulleye, glass bigeye, Heteropriacanthus cruentatus (Lacepède, 1801), also recorded as syn. Cookeolus boops Schneider, 1801 (Algoa Bay to Beira)[3][73]
- Crescent-tail bigeye Priacanthus hamrur (Forsskål, 1775) (Knysna to Mozambique)[3][4]
- Japanese bigeye Pristigenys niphonia (Cuvier, 1829) (Indian Ocean south to Algoa Bay)[3]
Family: Scaridae – Parrotfishes
- Christmas parrotfish Calotomus carolinus (Valenciennes, 1840) (Eastern Pacific to Natal)[3]
- Blue moon parrotfish, Chlorurus atrilunula (Randall & Bruce, 1983), recorded as syn. Scarus atrilunula Randall and Bruce, 1983 (Kenya to Natal)[3][74]
- Blue humphead parrotfish Chlorurus cyanescens (Valenciennes, 1840) (Mauritius, Madagascar, Zanzibar and Natal to 30°S)[3][4](syn. Scarus cyanescens)
- Bullethead parrotfish, Chlorurus sordidus (Forsskål, 1775), recorded as syn. Scarus sordidus Forsskål, 1775 (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3][75]
- Marbled parrotfish Leptoscarus vaigiensis (Quoy and Gaimard, 1824) (East Africa south to Transkei)[3]
- Redbarred parrotfish Scarus caudofasciatus (Günther, 1862) (Western Indian Ocean to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Lunate parrotfish Scarus festivus Valenciennes, 1840 (French Polynesia to east Africa; observed off Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Bluebarred parrotfish Scarus ghobban Forsskål, 1775 (Red sea to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Roundhead parrotfish Scarus globiceps Valenciennes, 1840 (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Dusky parrotfish Scarus niger Forsskål, 1775 (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Palenose parrotfish Scarus psittacus Forsskål, 1775 (Red Sea south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Ember parrotfish Scarus rubroviolaceus Bleeker, 1847 (Eastern Pacific to Durban)[3][4]
- Eclipse parrotfish Scarus russelii (Tropical and subtropical Indian Ocean from India westwards but not Persian Gulf or Red Sea. One specimen from Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Fivesaddle parrotfish Scarus scaber Valenciennes, 1840 (East Africa south to Natal)[3]
- Tricolour parrotfish Scarus tricolor Bleeker, 1847 (East Africa south to Natal)[3]
Family: Sciaenidae – Kobs
- Kob, Giant Kob or Kabeljou Argyrosomus japonicus (Temminck & Schlegel, 1843) (Namibia to Natal)[3][4] previously misidentified as Argyrosomus hololepidotus (Lacepède, 1801)[3]
- Squaretail kob Argyrosomus thorpei Smith, 1977 (Algoa Bay to Tugela River)[3][4]
- Geelbek Atractoscion aequidens (Cuvier, 1830) (Angola to northern KwaZulu-Natal)[3][4]
- Longfin Kob Atrobucca nibe (Jordan and Thompson, 1911) (Natal)[3]
- Bellfish, small kob, Johnius amblycephalus (Bleeker, 1855), also recorded as syn. Johnius dussumieri (Cuvier, 1830) (Indo-West Pacific to Algoa Bay)[3][4][76]
- Snapper kob Otolithes ruber (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3][4]
- Baardman or Belman Umbrina canariensis Valenciennes, 1843 (Morocco to the Cape of Good Hope through to Pakistan)[3][4]
- Slender baardman Umbrina ronchus Valenciennes, 1843 (KwaZulu-Natal)[3][4]
Family: Sillaginidae – Sillagos
- Clubfoot sillago, Sillaginopodys chondropus (Bleeker, 1849), recorded as syn. Sillago chondropus Bleeker, 1849 (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3][77]
- Blotchy sillago Sillago maculata Quoy and Gaimard, 1824 (China to South Africa)[3]
- Silver smelt or Silver sillago Sillago sihama (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Knysna)[3][4]
Family: Sparidae – Seabreams
- River bream Acanthopagrus berda (Forsskål, 1775) (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Knysna)[3][4]
- Two-bar seabream Acanthopagrus bifasciatus (Forsskål, 1775) (Red Sea to Natal)[3]
- Soldier bream Argyrops filamentosus (Valenciennes, 1830) (Red Sea to Natal)[3]
- King soldierbream Argyrops spinifer (Forsskål, 1775) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Knysna))[3][4]
- Carpenter Argyrozona argyrozona (Valenciennes, 1830) (Cape Columbine to central KwaZulu-Natal)[3][4]
- Fransmadam Boopsoidea inornata Castelnau, 1861 (Cape Columbine to central KwaZulu-Natal)[3][4]
- Santer Cheimerius nufar (Valenciennes, 1830) (Mossel Bay to Mozambique)[4]
- Englishman Chrysoblephus anglicus (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Port Elizabeth to Mozambique)[3][4]
- Dageraad Chrysoblephus cristiceps (Valenciennes, 1830) (Cape Point to Durban)[3][4]
- Red stumpnose or Miss Lucy Chrysoblephus gibbiceps (Valenciennes, 1830) (Cape Point to East London)[3][4]
- Roman Chrysoblephus laticeps (Valenciennes, 1830) (Cape Point to southern KwaZulu-Natal)[4](Cape to Mauritius)[3]
- False Englishman Chrysoblephus lophus (Fowler, 1925) (Transkei to Northern KwaZulu-Natal)[4](Natal)[3]
- Slinger Chrysoblephus puniceus (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Knysna to Mozambique)[3][4]
- White karanteen Crenidens crenidens (Forsskål, 1775) (Red Sea to East London)[3][4]
- Poenskop or Black musselcrackerCymatoceps nasutus (Castelnau, 1861) (Cape Columbine to Durban)[3][4]
- Blacktail Diplodus capensis (Smith, 1844) (Angola to Madagascar)[3][4] (syn. Diplodus sargus capensis)
- Zebra, Diplodus hottentotus (Smith, 1844) recorded as syn. Diplodus cervinus hottentotus (Smith, 1844) (Cape Point to Sodwana Bay)[3][4][78]
- Janbruin Gymnocrotaphus curvidens Günther, 1859 (Cape Point to Durban)[3][4]
- West coast steenbras Lithognathus aureti Smith, 1962 (West coast; Cape Town to Angola)[3][4]
- White steenbras Lithognathus lithognathus (Cuvier, 1829) (Orange River to Durban)[3][4]
- Sand steenbras Lithognathus mormyrus (Linnaeus, 1758)(Mediterranean to the Cape of Good Hope and round to Mozambique)[3][4]
- Blue hottentot Pachymetopon aeneum (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Cape Point to Sodwana Bay)[3][4]
- Hottentot Pachymetopon blochii (Valenciennes, 1830) (Angola to Cape Agulhas)[3][4]
- Bronze bream Pachymetopon grande Günther, 1859 (Mossel Bay to Mozambique)[4](Cape to Madagascar)[3]
- Red tjor-tjor or Sand soldier Pagellus natalensis Steindachner, 1903 (Mossel Bay to Madagascar)[3][4](syn. Pagellus bellottii natalensis)
- Red steenbras Petrus rupestris (Valenciennes, 1830) (Cape Point to Durban)[3][4]
- German Polyamblyodon germanum (Barnard, 1934) (East London to Maputo)[3][4]
- Christie Polyamblyodon gibbosum (Pellegrin) (Natal to Beira)[3]
- Blueskin Polysteganus coeruleopunctatus Klunzinger, 1870 (Red Sea to Natal south coast)[3]
- Scotsman Polysteganus praeorbitalis (Günther, 1859) (Port Elizabeth to Beira)[3][4]
- Seventy-four Polysteganus undulosus (Regan, 1908) (Port Elizabeth to Maputo)[4](Cape of Good Hope to Delagoa Bay)[3]
- Dane Porcostoma dentata (Gilchrist & Thompson, 1908) (Central KwaZulu-Natal to Mozambique)[4](Knysna to Beira)[3]
- Panga Pterogymnus laniarius (Valenciennes, 1830) (Cape Point to Transkei)[4](Cape to Beira)[3]
- White stumpnose Rhabdosargus globiceps (Valenciennes, 1830) (Namibia to East London)[4](Angola to Natal)[3]
- Cape stumpnose Rhabdosargus holubi (Steindachner, 1881) (Cape Agulhas to Maputo)[4](Cape to Natal)[3]
- Natal stumpnose Rhabdosargus sarba (Forsskål, 1775) (Port Elizabeth to Mozambique)[4](Red sea to Knysna)[3]
- Bigeye stumpnose Rhabdosargus thorpei Smith, 1979 (Durban to southern Mozambique)[4]
- Strepie Sarpa salpa (Linnaeus, 1758) (Cape Columbine to Maputo)[4](Mediterranean and eastern Atlantic round South Africa to southern Mozambique)[3]
- Musselcracker Sparodon durbanensis (Castelnau, 1861) (Cape Columbine to Durban)[3][4]
- Picarel, Spicara australe (Regan, 1921) (Known only from off Natal)[3][79]
- Windtoy, Spicara axillare (Boulanger, 1900) (Known only from Cape Town to Natal)[3][80]
- Steentjie Spondyliosoma emarginatum (Valenciennes, 1830) (Saldanha Bay to Durban) Spondyliosoma emarginatum[4]
Order Gadiformes
[edit]Family: Bregmacerotidae – Codlets
- Antenna codlet, Bregmaceros atlanticus Goode and Bean, 1886 (Off south Cape and Natal coasts; Circumtropical)[3]
- Bregmaceros macclellandii Thompson, 1840 (from Cape eastwards; circumtropical but not known from east Pacific)[3]
- Bregmaceros nectabanus Whitley, 1941 (Cape eastwards to tropical Indo-West Pacific; Tropical eastern Atlantic)[3]
Family: Lotidae – Lings and rocklings
- Cape rockling Gaidropsarus capensis (Kaup, 1858) (Cape Town to East London)[3]
- Comb rockling Gaidropsarus insularum Sivertsen, 1945 (Cape Peninsula and West coast)[3]
Family: Macrouridae – Grenadiers
- Bathygadus favosus Goode and Bean, 1886 (off Cape Town)[3]
- Bathygadus melanobranchus Vaillant, 1888 (Table Bay and Natal coast. Unverified, specimens missing)[3]
- Bathygadus sp. (cf. favosus Goode and Bean) (Mozambique and Agulhas Bank)[3]
- Coelorinchus acanthiger Barnard, 1925 (off Namibia to Cape Point)[3]
- Coelorinchus braueri Barnard, 1925 (Saldanha and Table Bay, Cape Point, East London; Angola to Mozambique)[3]
- Coelorinchus denticulatus Regan, 1921 (Natal coast to Tanzania)[3][81]
- Coelorinchus fasciatus (Günther, 1878) (off south coast)[3]
- Coelorinchus flabellispinis (Alcock, 1894) (Indian Ocean. Specimens from southern Africa differ somewhat from those off India and may be a different species)[3]
- Mahia whiptail, Coelorinchus matamua (McCann & McKnight, 1980) (apparently abundant off South Africa, also found off New Zealand and southern Australia)[3] (syn. Mahia matamua McCann and McKnight, 1980)
- Abyssal grenadier, Coryphaenoides armatus (Hector, 1875) (abyssal, all oceans except Arctic. One Atlantic record off South Africa)[3]
- Coryphaenoides striaturus Barnard, 1925 (off Cape Point)[3]
- Longrayed whiptail, Coryphaenoides subserrulatus Makushok, 1976 (Agulhas bank)[3]
- Gadomus capensis (Gilchrist and von Bonde, 1924) (Table Bay to Mozambique)[3]
- Macrourus holotrachys Günther, 1878 (Cape Point and Prince Edward Island; also off New Zealand and southwestern Australia)[3]
- Kuronezumia leonis (Barnard, 1925), recorded as syn. Nezumia leonis(Barnard, 1925) (off Cape Point); Namibia; southwestern Atlantic)[3][82]
- Lucigadus ori (Smith, 1968), recorded as syn. Ventrifossa ori (Smith, 1968) (off Agulhas bank, Durban and East London)[3][83]
- Malacocephalus laevis (Lowe, 1843) (off South Africa; widespread in Atlantic and Indian oceans)[3]
- Mesovagus antipodum (Hubbs & Iwamoto, 1977), recorded as syn. Mesobius antipodum Hubbs and Iwamoto, 1977 (off south coast of SA; New Zealand, eastern Indian Ocean and Madagascar plateau)[3][84]
- Nezumia brevibarbata (Barnard, 1925) (Cape Point; Known only off the Cape, where it is common)[3]
- Trachyrincus scabrus (Rafinesque, 1810) (Namibia, west coast of South Africa; eastern North Atlantic and Mediterranean sea)[3]
- Ventrifossa aff. divergens Gilbert and Hubbs, 1920 (off East London, Durban, Natal and southern Mozambique)[3]
- Ventrifossa nasuta (Smith, 1935) (Durban to Mozambique)[3]
Family: Melanonidae – Melanonids
- Pelagic cod, Melanonus gracilis Günther, 1878 (Circum-Antarctic south of Subtropical convergence; off Cape Peninsula)[3]
Family: Merlucciidae – Hakes
- Lyconodes argenteus (Gilchrist, 1922) (west of Cape of Good Hope)[3]
- Straptail, Cape grenadier, South African straptail, Macruronus capensis Davies, 1950 (off Algoa Bay)[3]
- Shallow water hake Merluccius capensis Castelnau, 1861 (Namibia to East London)[4]
- Deep water hake Merluccius paradoxus Franca, 1960 (Cape Frio to East London)[4]
Family: Moridae – Deepsea cods
- Blue antimora, Antimora rostrata (Günther, 1878) (Locally abundant, found in most oceans)[4]
- Guttigadus globiceps (Gilchrist, 1906), recorded as syn. Laemonema globiceps Gilchrist, 1906 (off south-western Cape coast)[4][85]
- Laemonema compressicauda (Gilchrist, 1904) (2 small specimens off Transkei)[4]
- Lepidion capensis Gilchrist, 1922 (Cape to East London)[4]
- Lepidion natalensis Gilchrist, 1922 (continental slope off Natal)[4]
- Physiculus capensis Gilchrist, 1922 (Cape Peninsula to East London)[4]
- Physiculus natalensis Gilchrist, 1922 (upper slope off Natal)[4]
- Grenadier cod, Tripterophycis gilchristi Boulenger, 1902 (upper slope off the Cape and Durban)[4]
Order: Gobiesociformes
[edit]Family: Gobiesocidae – Clingfishes
- Chubby clingfish Apletodon pellegrini (Chabanaud, 1925) (Senegal (west Africa) to Port Alfred)[3]
- Rocksucker Chorisochismus dentex (Pallas, 1769) (Port Nolloth to northern KwaZulu-Natal)[3][4]
- Bigeye clingfish Diplecogaster megalops Briggs, 1955 (False Bay to Durban)[3]
- Weedsucker, Eckloniaichthys scylliorhiniceps Smith, 1943 (Lüderitz to Kei River mouth)[3]
- Pale clingfish Lepadichthys caritus Briggs, 1969 (Sodwana Bay to Seychelles)[3]
- Eyestripe clingfish Lepadichthys coccinotaenia Regan, 1921 (Southern KwaZulu-Natal (31°S) to Tanzania)[3]
- Doubleline clingfish Lepadichthys lineatus Briggs, 1966 (Sodwana Bay and Red sea)[3]
- Mini-clingfish Pherallodus smithi Briggs, 1955 (Durban)[3]
Order: Gobiiformes
[edit]Family: Eleotridae – Sleepers
- Duckbill sleeper, crazy fish, Butis butis (Hamilton, 1822) (Tropical Indo-West pacific south to Mgeni Beachwood estuary)[3][86]
- Blackspot sleeper Butis melanostigma (Bleeker, 1849) (Port St Johns. Also tropical western Pacific)[3]
- Dusky sleeper Eleotris fusca (Forster, 1801) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Coffee Bay)[3][87]
- Widehead sleeper Eleotris mauritiana (Bennett, 1832) (Umtata River to Mozambique)[3][88]
- Broadhead sleeper Eleotris melanosoma Bleeker, 1853 (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Qora River)[3][89]
- Golden sleeper, Hypseleotris cyprinoides (Valenciennes, 1837), recorded as syn, Hypseleotris dayi Smith, 1950 (Fresh and brackish water, St. Lucia and Empangeni, Natal)[3][90]
- Flathead sleeper Ophiocara porocephala (Valenciennes, 1837) (Durban to Shimoni)[3]
Family: Gobiidae – Gobies
Subfamily: Amblyopinae
- Bulldog eelgoby, Taenioides esquivel Smith, 1946 (Delagoa Bay to Transkei)[3]
- Bearded eelgoby, Taenioides jacksoni Smith, 1943 (Estuaries of Natal)[3]
- Comb goby, Paratrypauchen microcephalus (Bleeker, 1860), recorded as syn. Trypauchen microcephalus Bleeker, 1860 (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3][91]
Subfamily: Gobiinae
- Mangrove goby Acentrogobius audax Smith, 1959 (Natal)[3]
- Shadow goby, Acentrogobius nebulosus (Forsskål, 1775), recorded as syn. Yongeichthys nebulosus (Forsskål, 1775). (Western tropical Pacific and Indian oceans south to Durban)[3][92]
- Pinkbar goby, Amblyeleotris aurora (Polunin & Lubbock, 1977) (Islands of western Indian Ocean from Maldives southwards and northern Natal)[3]
- Gorgeous goby, gorgeous prawn goby, Amblyeleotris wheeleri (Polunin & Lubbock, 1977) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Butterfly goby Amblygobius albimaculatus (Rüppell, 1830) (Read sea south to Durban)[3]
- Starryfin goby Asterropteryx semipunctata Rüppell, 1830 (Ind-Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Bearded goby, cryptic bearded goby, Barbuligobius boehlkei Lachler & McKinney, 1974 (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Whitespotted goby, Bathygobius coalitus (Bennett, 1832), recorded as syn. Bathygobius albopunctatus (Valenciennes, 1837), (Inhaca south to Transkei)[3][93]
- Cocos frillgoby Bathygobius cocosensis (Bleeker, 1854) (Indo-Pacific south to Transkei)[3]
- Cheekscaled frillgoby Bathygobius cotticeps (Steindachner, 1880) (Indo-Pacific south to Coffee Bay)[3]
- Spotted frillgoby Bathygobius cyclopterus (Valenciennes, 1837) (Tropical Indo-West Pacific south to Transkei)[3]
- Brownboy goby Bathygobius laddi (Fowler, 1931) (Inhaca to Coffee Bay)[3]
- Black minigoby Bathygobius niger (Smith, 1960) (Transkei to Natal, also India and Sri-Lanka)[3]
- Brownlined goby, Bathygobius sp. (Indo-West Pacific south to Xora River)[3]
- Agulhas goby Caffrogobius agulhensis (Barnard, 1927) (False Bay to East London)[3]
- Banded goby Caffrogobius caffer (Günther, 1874) (Natal to False Bay)[3][4]
- Prison goby, Caffrogobius gilchristi (Boulenger, 1898), also recorded as syn. Caffrogobius multifasciatus (Smith, 1959), (Table Bay to Mozambique Island)[3][4]
- Baldy, Caffrogobius natalensis (Günther, 1874) (Knysna to Natal)[3]
- Barehead goby, Caffrogobius nudiceps (Valenciennes, 1827) (Walvis Bay to East London)[3][4]
- Commafin goby, Caffrogobius saldanha (Barnard, 1927) (Saldanha Bay to southern Transkei)[3]
- Pacific goby, Callogobius sclateri (Steindachner, 1880) (Sodwana Bay and tropical Pacific)[3]
- Kaalpens goby, Coryogalops william (Smith, 1948), also recorded as syn. Monishia william (Smith, 1947), (Inhaca to Still Bay)[3]
- Naked goby Croilia mossambica Smith, 1955 (Southern Mozambique to south of Durban)[3][94]
- Sailfin goby, Myersina pretoriusi (Smith, 1958), recorded as syn. Cryptocentrus pretoriusi Smith, 1958 (Known only from Pondoland)[3][95]
- Blackthroat goby, Favonigobius melanobranchus (Fowler, 1934) (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Tropical sand goby, Favonigobius reichei Bleeker, 1953 (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Barenape goby, Fusigobius duospilus Hoese & Reader, 1985 (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Longspine goby Fusigobius longispinus Goren, 1978 (Kenya to Durban)[3]
- Sleepy goby, Psammogobius biocellatus (Valenciennes, 1837), recorded as syn. Glossogobius biocellatus (Valenciennes, 1837) (Indo-Pacific south to East London)[3][96]
- River goby Glossogobius callidus (Smith, 1937) (Aldabra, Mozambique, south to Port Elizabeth)[3]
- Tank goby, Glossogobius giuris (Hamilton, 1822) (Indo-West Pacific south to Port St. Johns)[3]
- Rippled coralgoby Gobiodon rivulatus (Rüppell) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Poreless goby Hetereleotris apora (Hoese and Winterbottom, 1979) (Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Smoothscale goby Hetereleotris margaretae Hoese, 1986 (Known only from Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Locusthead Hetereleotris tentaculata (Seychelles and Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Goggles Hetereleotris zonata (Fowler, 1934) (Natal to Port Alfred)[3]
- Decorated goby Istigobius decoratus (Herre, 1927) (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Pearl goby Istigobius spence (Smith, 1946) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Taileyed goby Parachaeturichthys polynema (Bleeker, 1953) (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Redhead goby Paragobiodon echinocephalus (Rüppell, 1830) (Indo-West Pacific, associated with Stylophora coral)[3]
- Backfin goby Paragobiodon lacunicolus (Kendall & Goldsborough, 1911) (Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Emerald goby Paragobiodon xanthosoma (Bleeker, 1852) (Indo-West Pacific, associated with the coral Seriatopora hystrix)[3]
- Scalynape goby Pleurosicya annandalei (Hornell & Fowler, 1922) (Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Toothy goby Pleurosicya mossambica (Smith, 1959) (Sodwana Bay, Mozambique, Seychelles and tropical Indo-West Pacific)[3]
- Pleurosicya sp. 1 (Sodwana Bay, Seychelles, Chagos archipelago, tropical Indian Ocean and western tropical Pacific)[3]
- Convict goby Priolepis cincta (Regan, 1908) (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Sodwana goby Priolepis sp. (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Knysna sandgoby Psammogobius knysnaensis Smith, 1935 (Port Nolloth to northern KwaZulu-Natal)[3][4]
- Barebreast goby, sibayi goby, Silhouettea sibayi Farquharson, 1970 (Known only from Lake Sibayi and Kosi Bay)[3]
- Pelagic goby, Sufflogobius bibarbatus (von Bonde, 1923) (Port Nolloth to Saldanha Bay)[3]
- Polkadot goby Trimma corallinum (Smith, 1969) (Phinda to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Flame goby Trimma macrophthalmum (Tomiyama, 1936) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Pennant glider Valenciennea strigata (Broussonet, 1787) (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay[3]
Subfamily: Gobionellinae
- Freshwater goby Awaous aeneofuscus (Peters, 1852) (Estuaries and freshwaters from Algoa Bay to Zambezi)[3]
- Weeper Gnatholepis sp. 1 (Western Indian Ocean south to Transkei)[3]
- Slender weeper Gnatholepis sp. 2 (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Durban goby Mugilogobius durbanensis (Barnard, 1927) (Southern Mozambique to Coffee Bay)[3]
- Meander goby, Mugilogobius mertoni (Weber, 1911), recorded as syn. Mugilogobius inhacae (Smith, 1959) (Southern Mozambique to Natal)[3][97]
- Sharptail goby Oligolepis acutipennis(Valenciennes, 1837) (Indo-West Pacific south to Great Fish River)[3]
- Kei goby, Oxyurichthys keiensis (Smith, 1938), recorded as syn. Oligolepis keiensis (Smith, 1938) (Seychelles, Madagascar and Inhaca to Fish River Mouth)[3][98]
- Maned goby Oxyurichthys microlepis (Bleeker, 1849) (Indo-West Pacific south to Xora River mouth)[3]
- Eyebrow goby Oxyurichthys ophthalmonema (Bleeker, 1857) (Indo-West Pacific south to Xora River mouth)[3]
- Dwarfgoby Pandaka silvana (Barnard, 1943) (Northern Mozambique to Knysna)[3]
- Bigmouth goby Redigobius bikolanus (Herre, 1927) (Indo-Pacific south to Coffee Bay)[3]
- Checked goby Redigobius dewaali (Weber, 1897) (Freshwater and estuarine, Southern Mozambique to Knysna)[3]
Subfamily: Oxudercinae
- African mudhopper, common mudskipper, Periophthalmus kalolo Lesson, 1831, also recorded as syn. Periophthalmus koelreuteri, (Seychelles, Kenya to Transkei)[3][4]
- Bigfin mudhopper, barred mudskipper, Periophthalmus argentilineatus Valenciennes, 1837, also recorded as syn. Periophthalmus sobrinus Eggert, 1935, (Port Alfred to Red Sea)[3][4]
Family: Microdesmidae – Gobies
Subfamily: Ptereleotrinae
- Fire goby Nemateleotris magnifica Fowler, 1938 (Sodwana Bay and Comores to Marquesas islands)[3][4]
- Scissortail Ptereleotris evides (Jordan & Hubbs, 1925) (Red Sea south to Natal)[3]
- Blacktail goby Ptereleotris heteroptera (Bleeker, 1855) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Sad glider Ptereleotris lineopinnis (Fowler, 1935) (Umzumbi, Natal, 1 specimen)[3]
Family: Trichonotidae – Sand divers
- Sand diver Trichonotus marleyi (Smith, 1936) (Known only from Durban to Delagoa Bay)[3]
Order Gonorynchiformes
[edit]Family: Chanidae
- Milkfish Chanos chanos (Forsskål, 1775) (Krom river to tropical Indo-West Pacific)[3][4]
Family: Gonorynchidae – Beaked sandfish
- Beaked sandfish Gonorynchus gonorynchus (Linnaeus 1766) (Cape of Good Hope)[3][99]
Order: Holocentriformes
[edit]Family: Holocentridae – Squirrelfishes and Soldierfishes
Subfamily: Holocentrinae – Squirrelfishes
- Spotfin squirrelfish Neoniphon sammara (Forsskål, 1775) (Tropical Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Tailspot squirrelfish Sargocentron caudimaculatum (Rüppell, 1838) (Red sea and Indo-Pacific south to Xora river mouth, Transkei)[3]
- Crown squirrelfish Sargocentron diadema (Lacepède, 1802) (Durban to Mozambique)[4] (Indo-Pacific south to East London)[3]
- Dark-striped squirrelfish Sargocentron praslin (Lacepède, 1802) (Indo-West Pacific reported by Smith to reach Durban, but no specimens available from south of Mozambique)[3]
- Speckled squirrelfish Sargocentron punctatissimum (Cuvier, 1829) (Indo-Pacific south to Algoa Bay)[3]
- Sabre squirrelfish Sargocentron spiniferum (Forsskål, 1775) (Red sea and east coast of Africa south to Natal)[3]
Subfamily: Myripristinae – Soldierfishes
- Shadowfin soldier Myripristis adusta Bleeker, 1853 (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Bigscale soldier, Blotcheye soldierfish, Myripristis berndti Jordan and Evermann, 1903 (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Pale soldier, Myripristis botche Cuvier, 1829, recorded as sym. Myripristis melanosticta Bleeker, 1863, (Indian ocean (Sri Lanka, Maldives and Sodwana Bay) to Japan and New Hebrides)[3][100]
- Yellowfin soldier, Myripristis chryseres Jordan and Evermann, 1903 (Aliwal shoal)[3]
- Epaulette soldier, Myripristis kuntee (Cuvier, 1831) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Blotcheye soldier, Myripristis murdjan (Forsskål, 1775) (Transkei to Mozambique)[4](Red Sea and Ind-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Lattice soldier Myripristis violacea Bleeker, 1851, (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Shy soldier Plectrypops lima (Valenciennes, 1831) (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
Order Kurtiformes
[edit]Family: Apogonidae – Cardinal fishes (see also Epigonidae)
Subfamily: Apogoninae
- Ruby cardinal Apogon coccineus Rüppell, 1838 (Red Sea south to Durban)[3]
- Threeband cardinal Apogon semiornatus Peters, 1876 (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Sad cardinal, Apogonichthyoides timorensis (Bleeker, 1854), recorded as syn. Apogon timorensis Bleeker, 1854 (Indo-West Pacific, Red Sea south to Sodwana Bay)[3][101]
- Ocellated cardinal Apogonichthys ocellatus (Weber, 1913) (Indo-West Pacific south to Coffee Bay)[3]
- Speckled cardinal, Apogonichthys Bleeker, 1954 (Indo-West Pacific, Red Sea to Sodwana Bay)[3](check source)
- Tiger cardinal, Cheilodipterus macrodon (Lacepède, 1802), recorded as syn. Cheilodipterus lineatus Lacepède, 1801 (Sodwana Bay to Red Sea)[3][102]
- Masked cardinal, Fibramia thermalis (Cuvier, 1829), recorded as syn. Apogon thermalis Cuvier, 1829 (Indo-West Pacific to southern Natal)[3][103]
- Foa, Foa brachygramma (Jenkins, 1903) (Indo-Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Crosseyed cardinal, Fowleria aurita (Valenciennes, 1831) (Natal to Red Sea)[3]
- Spotfin cardinal, Jaydia queketti (Gilchrist, 1903), recorded as syn. Apogon queketti Gilchrist, 1903, (Natal coast to southern Red Sea)[3][104]
- Smallscale cardinal, Lepidamia multitaeniata (Cuvier, 1828), recorded as syn. Apogon multitaeniatus Ehrenberg, 1828 (Red Sea to Durban)[3][105]
- Broadstriped cardinal, Ostorhinchus angustatus (Smith & Radcliffe, 1911), recorded as syn. Apogon angustatus (Smith and Radcliffe, 1911) (Red Sea to Natal)[3][4][106]
- Diamond cardinal, short tooth cardinal,Ostorhinchus apogonoides (Bleeker, 1856), recorded as syn. Apogon apogonides (Bleeker, 1856) (Indo-Pacific south to Durban)[3][107] and as syn. Apogon enigmaticus (Smith, 1961) (1 specimen off Durban)[3][108]
- Bandtail cardinal, ring-tailed cardinalfish, Ostorhinchus aureus (Lacepède, 1802), recorded as syn. Apogon aureus (Lacepède, 1802) (Red Sea south to Durban)[3][4][109]
- Blackbanded cardinal, Ostorhinchus cookii (MacLeay, 1881), recorded as syn. Apogon cookii Macleay, 1881 (Western Indian Ocean south to Durban)[3][4][110]
- Coachwhip cardinal, Ostorhinchus flagelliferus Smith, 1961, recorded as syn. Apogon flagelliferus (Smith, 1961) (Sodwana Bay and Mozambique)[3][111]
- Blackfoot cardinal, Ostorhinchus nigripes (Playfair, 1867), recorded as syn. Apogon nigripes Playfair, 1867 (Lake St. Lucia northwards, probably to Red Sea)[3][112]
- Ninestripe cardinal, Ostorhinchus taeniophorus (Regan, 1908), recorded as syn. Apogon taeniophorus Regan, 1908 (Indian Ocean south to Sodwana Bay)[3][4][113]
- Spurcheek cardinal, Pristiapogon fraenatus (Valenciennes, 1832), recorded as syn. Apogon fraenatus Valenciennes, 1832 (Durban to Red Sea)[3][114]
- Spinyhead cardinal, Pristiapogon kallopterus (Bleeker, 1856), recorded as syn. Apogon kallopterus Bleeker, 1856 (Algoa Bay to Red Sea)[3][115]
- Arrow cardinal Rhabdamia gracilis (Bleeker, 1856) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Sea urchin cardinal Siphamia mossambica Smith, 1955 (Kenya to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Shimmering cardinal, Taeniamia lineolata, (Cuvier, 1828) Archamia lineolata (Ehrenberg, 1828) (Indo-Pacific, Red sea to Durban)[3][116]
- Mozambique cardinal, Taeniamia mozambiquensis (Smith, 1961), recorded as syn. Archamia mozambiquensis Smith, 1961 (Zanzibar to Sodwana Bay)[3][117]
Subfamily: Pseudaminae
- Jelly cardinal Pseudamia gelatinosa Smith, 1955 (Indo-Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Limpid cardinal Pseudamiops pellucidus (Smith, 1954) (East Africa south to Sodwana Bay)[3]
Order Lampriformes
[edit]Family: Lamprididae – Opahs (Lampridae in Smiths)
- Spotted opah Lampris guttatus (Brünnich, 1788) (all oceans but not in polar waters, occurs throughout South African waters, usually well offshore)[3]
- Southern opah Lampris immaculatus Gilchrist, 1904 (Circumglobal south of 30°S)[3]
Family: Lophotidae – Crestfishes
- Unicorn crestfish Eumecichthys fiski (Günther, 1890) (1 specimen, Kalk Bay in False Bay)[3]
- Crestfish Lophotus lacepede Giorna, 1809 (Cape to Plettenberg Bay, rare but widely distributed in all oceans)[3]
Family: Radiicephalidae – Tapertail
- Tapertail Radiicephalus elongatus Osorio, 1917 (70 miles SW of Cape Point)[3]
Family: Regalecidae – Oarfishes
- Streamer fish Agrostichthys parkeri Giorna, 1809 (Southeast Atlantic, New Zealand and Tasmania)[3]
- Oarfish Regalecus glesne Ascanius, 1772 (worldwide distribution)[3]
Family: Trachipteridae – Ribbonfishes
- Polka-dot ribbonfish Desmodema polystictum (Ogilby, 1898) (1 juvenile washed ashore at Xora river and 1 found at Simon's Town, False Bay)[3]
- Blacktail ribbonfish Trachipterus jacksonensis (Ramsay, 1881) (East London and off Cape Town)[3]
- Peregrine ribbonfish Trachipterus trachypterus (Gmelin, 1789) (off Table Bay)[3]
- Scalloped ribbonfish Zu cristatus (Bonelli, 1819), (prejuveniles collected at Luderitz, Algoa bay and Durban)[3]
- Taper tail ribbonfish Zu elongatus (Heemstra and Kannemeyer, 1984) (4 specimens trawled off the western Cape coast)[3]
Order Lophiiformes – Anglerfishes
[edit]Family: Antennariidae – Anglers
- Big angler Antennarius commersoni (Latreille, 1804) (Natal, Red Sea and tropical Indo-West Pacific to Hawaiian islands)[3]
- Shaggy angler, shaggy frogfish, Antennarius hispidus (Bloch and Schneider, 1801) (Indo-West Pacific, south to Knysna)[3]
- Painted angler, painted frogfish, Antennarius pictus (Shaw and Nodder, 1794) (Durban to Zanzibar and tropical Indo-West Pacific to Hawaii)[3][4]
- Striped angler,striated frogfish, Antennarius striatus (Shaw and Nodder, 1794) (Algoa Bay through Indo-West Pacific to Hawaiian islands)[3]
- Freckled angler Antennatus coccineus (Lesson, 1831), recorded as syn. Antennarius coccineus (Lesson, 1831), (Natal; throughout Indian Ocean, Red Sea and tropical Pacific to Hawaiian islands; Tropical and eastern Pacific off Costa Rica and Cocos and Galapagos islands)[3][118]
- Pygmy angler, Antennatus tuberosus (Cuvier, 1817), recorded as syn. Antennarius tuberosus (Cuvier, 1817) (Natal, Maputo, Madagascar, Aldabra islands, and throughout Indo-West Pacific including Hawaiian and Line islands, and Taumotu Archipelago to Pitcairn island)[3][4][119]
- Sargassum fish, Histrio histrio (Linnaeus, 1758) (Cape Point to Mozambique)[3][4]
Family: Ceratiidae – Seadevils
- Ceratias holboelli Krøyer, 1845 (single specimen off Cape Town at 34°12'S, 16°35'E; Nearly cosmopolitan in the world's oceans)[3]
- Ceratias tentaculatus (Norman, 1930) (Specimens from off Dealagoa bay, off southern Natal, off Saldanha bay. Throughout southern oceans)[3]
- Cryptopsaras couesii Gill, 1883 (off Cape of Good Hope, all major oceans)[3]
Family: Chaunacidae – Coffinfishes
- Chaunax penicillatus McCulloch, 1915 (Natal and Southern Mozambique)[3]
- Chaunax pictus Lowe, 1846 (Knysna to Natal)[3]
Family: Himantolophidae – Footballfish
- Himantolophus groenlandicus Reinhardt, 1837 (all major oceans)[3]
Family: Linophrynidae – Dwarf anglers
- Linophryne parini Bertelsen, 1980 (1 specimen off Port Alfred)[3]
- Linophryne lucifer Collett, 1886, recorded as syn. Linophryne digitopogon Balushkin and Trunov, 1988, (1 specimen off Hondeklipbaai on west coast)[3][120]
Family: Lophiidae – Monks
- Natal monk Lophiodes insidiator (Regan, 1921) (Natal to northern Madagascar)[3]
- Lophiodes mutilus (Alcock, 1893) (Indo-West Pacific south to Natal)[3]
- Lophiomus setigerus (Vahl, 1797) (Indo-West Pacific south to False Bay)[3]
- Monk, Lophius vomerinus (Valenciennes, 1837), also recorded as syn. Lophius upsicephalus Smith, 1841 [121](off Cape of Good Hope; Eastern South Atlantic and South western Indian Ocean off South Africa; Bay of Bengal off Burma)[3]
Family: Melanocetidae – Devil-anglers
- Melanocetus johnsonii Günther, 1864 (off all coasts of South Africa; all major oceans)[3]
Family: Ogcocephalidae – Seabats
- Coelophrys micropus (Alcock, 1891), recorded as Halieutopsis micropus (Alcock, 1891) (off Durban; South Africa to Philippines)[3][122]
- Circular seabat, Halieutaea fitzsimonsi (Gilchrist and Thompson, 1916) (Plettenberg bay to Tugela river, Natal)[3]
- Hairy seabat, Halieutaea hancocki Regan, 1908 (Tropical Indian Ocean; off Natal)[3]
- Spiny seabat, Halieutaea indica Annandale & Jenkins, 1910, recorded as syn. Halieutaea spicata Smith, 1965 (1 specimen, Isipingo, Natal)[3][123]
- Longnose seabat, Malthopsis lutea Alcock, 1891 (off Knysna; Eastern Indian Ocean and Japan)[3]
- Malthopsis mitrigera Gilbert and Cramer, 1897 (Natal to the Philippines, Japan and Hawaii)[3]
- Spearnose seabat Malthopsis tiarella Jordan, 1902 (Natal and Japan)[3]
- Solocisquama stellulata (Gilbert, 1905), recorded as syn. Dibranchus stellulatus Gilbert, 1905 (Off Natal; Hawaii)[3][124]
Order Mugiliformes
[edit]Family: Mugilidae – Mullets
- Groovy mullet, Chelon dumerili (Steindachner, 1870), recorded as syn. Liza dumerili (Steindachner, 1870) (Breede River to Bazaruto)[3][4][125]
- Southern mullet, Chelon richardsonii (Smith, 1846), recorded as syn. Liza richardsonii (Smith, 1846) (Kunene River to St. Lucia Estuary)[3][4][126]
- Striped mullet, Chelon tricuspidens (Smith, 1935), recorded as syn. Liza tricuspidens (Smith, 1935) (Mossel Bay to northern Kosi estuary)[3][4][127]
- Bluetail mullet, Crenimugil buchanani (Bleeker, 1853), recorded as syn. Valamugil buchanani (Bleeker, 1854) (Knysna to Indo-West Pacific)[3][4][128]
- Bluespot mullet, Crenimugil seheli (Fabricius, 1775), recorded as syn. Valamugil seheli (Forsskål, 1775) (Indo-West Pacific south to Transkei)[3][129]
- Squaretail mullet, Ellochelon vaigiensis (Quoy & Gaimard, 1825), recorded as syn. Liza vaigiensis (Quoy and Gaimard, 1825) (Indo-West Pacific, south to Durban)[3][130]
- Flathead mullet Mugil cephalus Linnaeus, 1758 (All warm and temperate seas, estuaries and rivers)[3][4]
- Longarm mullet, Osteomugil cunnesius (Valenciennes, 1836), recorded as syn. Valamugil cunnesius (Valenciennes, 1836) (Indo-West Pacific, occasionally reaches Natal)[3][131]
- Diamond mullet, Planiliza alata (Steindachner, 1892), recorded as syn. Liza alata (Steindachner, 1892), (Indo-West Pacific to Algoa Bay)[3][132]
- Large-scale mullet, Planiliza macrolepis (Smith, 1846), recorded as syn. Liza macrolepis (Smith, 1846) (Indo-West Pacific to Port Alfred)[3]
- St. Lucia mullet, giantscale mullet, otomebora mullet, Planiliza melinoptera (Valenciennes, 1836) recorded as syn. Liza luciae (Penrith & Penrith, 1967), and as syn. Liza melinoptera (Valenciennes, 1836) (Northern Transkei to southern Mozambique, Indo-West Pacific,)[3][133][134]
- Freshwater mullet, Pseudomyxus capensis (Valenciennes, 1836), recorded as syn. Myxus capensis (Valenciennes, 1836) (Knysna to KwaZulu-Natal)[3][4][135]
Order Mulliformes
[edit]Family: Mullidae – Goatfishes
- Yellowstripe goatfish, Mulloidichthys flavolineatus (Lacepède, 1801) (Red Sea to Knysna)[3](syn. Mulloides flavolineatus Lacepède, 1801)
- Flame goatfish or yellowfin goatfish, Mulloidichthys vanicolensis (Valenciennes, 1831) (Northern KwaZulu-Natal to Indo-West Pacific)[3][4](syn. Mulloides vanicolensis)
- Dash-dot goatfish, dash-and-dot goatfish, Parupeneus barberinus (Lacepède, 1801) (Indo-West Pacific south to Mossel Bay)[3]
- Goldsaddle goatfish Parupeneus cyclostomus (Lacepède, 1801) (Red Sea to Durban)[3]
- Redspot goatfish, Parupeneus heptacanthus (Lacepède, 1802), recorded as syn. Parupeneus cinnabarinus (Cuvier, 1829) (Red Sea south to Transkei)[3][136]
- Indian goatfish Parupeneus indicus Shaw, 1803 (Indo-West Pacific to Port Alfred)[3]
- Band dot goatfish Parupeneus macronemus (Lacepède, 1801) (Red Sea to Sodwana Bay)[3]
- Blacksaddle goatfish Parupeneus rubescens (Lacepède, 1801) (Cape Agulhas to Mozambique)[3][4]
- Two-saddle goatfish, Parupeneus trifasciatus (Lacepède, 1801), recorded as syn. Parupeneus bifasciatus (Lacepède, 1801) (Indo-West Pacific south to Sodwana Bay)[3][137]
- Blackstriped goatfish Upeneus tragula Richardson, 1846 (Indo-West Pacific south to Durban)[3]
- Yellowbanded goatfish Upeneus vittatus (Forsskål, 1775) (Red Sea to East London)[3]
Order Myctophiformes
[edit]Family: Myctophidae – Lanternfishes
- Benthosema fibulatum (Gilbert and Cramer, 1897) (Indian Ocean (18°N - 20°S), to 42°S in Agulhas current)[3]
- Benthosema suborbitale (Gilbert, 1913) (tropical distribution in 3 major oceans, extensions to 50°S and 50°N in western boundary currents)[3]
- Bolinichthys indicus (Nafpaktitis and Nafpaktitis, 1969) (Indian Ocean (20° - 45°S); Atlantic (20° - 50°N and 20° - 40°S))[3]
- Stubby lanternfish, Bolinichthys supralateralis (Parr, 1928) (off Cape Peninsula and in Agulgas current; Atlantic (40°N - 02°S and 32° to 40°S); Indian Ocean (21° - 30°S); west coast of Australia and near Hawaii)[3]
- Roundnose lanternfish, Centrobranchus nigroocellatus (Günther, 1873) (Atlantic (40°N - 36°S); Indian Ocean (08° - 34°S) and off Chile and New Zealand)[3]
- Warming's lantern fish, Ceratoscopelus warmingii (Lütken, 1892) (Atlantic(42°N - 40°S); Indian Ocean (20°N - 45°S);tropical/subtropical Pacific)[3]
- Bright lanternfish, Ctenoscopelus phengodes (Lütken, 1892), recorded as syn. Myctophum phengodes (Lütken, 1892) (Off all South African coasts)[3][138]
- Dasyscopelus asper, (Richardson, 1845), recorded as syn. Myctophum asperum Richardson, 1845, (off east coast and in Agulhas water pockets off west coast.)[3][139]
- Dasyscopelus obtusirostris (Tåning, 1928), recorded as syn. Myctophum obtusirostre Tåning, 1928 (In Agulhas current and off west coast in pockets of Agulhas water)[3][140]
- Wisner's lanternfish, Dasyscopelus selenops (Tåning, 1928), recorded as syn. Myctophum selenops Tåning, 1928 (West of Cape Peninsula in Agulhas water pockets)[3][141]
- Spiny lanternfish, Dasyscopelus spinosus (Steindachner, 1867), recorded as syn. Myctophum spinosum (Steindachner, 1867) (In Agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets)[3][142]
- Short-headed lantern fish, Diaphus brachycephalus Tåning, 1928 (In Agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets; broadly tropical in Atlantic and Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Crown lanternfish. Diaphus diadematus Tåning, 1928 (in Agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets and warmed upwelled central water northwards to 18°S; Indian Ocean (02°N - 38°S, and in Mozambique channel, but absent in central sector)[3]
- Dumeril's lanternfish, Diaphus dumerilii (Bleeker, 1856) (off west coast as pseudoceanic pelagic species southward to 23°S)[3]
- Headlight fish, Diaphus effulgens (Goode and Bean, 1896) (off all SA coasts)[3]
- Garman's lanternfish, Diaphus garmani (Gilbert, 1906)(east coast continental shelf/slope southwards to about 26°S)[3]
- Hudson's lanternfish, Diaphus hudsoni (Zubrigg and Scott, 1976) (From 18°S off west coast to 27°S off east coast)[3]
- Jensen's lanternfish, Diaphus jenseni Tåning, 1932 (one record at 33°49'S, 27°48'E; Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Spotlight lanternfish, Diaphus lucidus (Goode and Bean, 1896) (In Agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets. Atlantic(40°N - 38°S, but absent in Benguela upwelling region); also Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Luetken's lanternfish, Diaphus luetkeni (Brauer, 1904) (In Agulhas current to 37°S. Atlantic (42°N - 11°S) also Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Mead's lanternfish, Diaphus meadi Nafpaktitis, 1978 (In upwelled waters off west coast northwards to at least 21°S. Circumglobal convergence species (32° - 41°S))[3]
- Spothead lantern fish, Diaphus metopoclampus Cocco, 1829 South of 29°S off west coast and 27°S off east coast. Mediterranean, Atlantic, Indo-West Pacific)[3]
- Soft lanternfish, Diaphus mollis Tåning, 1928 (off all SA coasts, Broadly tropical distribution in all major oceans)[3]
- Diaphus nielseni Nafpaktitis, 1978 (taken once from Agulhas current (30°17'S, 31°25'E); off east coast of Madagascar, in Mozambique channel, and from southeast Asian seas to southern Japan)[3]
- Ostenfeld's lanternfish, Diaphus ostenfeldi Tåning, 1932 (off west coast northwards to about 23°S; Circumglobal convergence species (35° - 45°S))[3]
- Parr's lanternfish, Diaphus parri Tåning, 1932 (in Agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets, Indian Ocean (10°N - 12°S with extension to 25°S in Mozambique channel), southeast Asian seas and Pacific (tropical waters west of 95°W))[3]
- Transparent lanternfish, Diaphus perspicillatus (Ogilby,1898) (In Agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets. Broadly tropical species in Atlantic (45°N - 36°S, but absent in southeastern sector); Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Problematic lanternfish, Diaphus problematicus Parr, 1928 (In Agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets. Atlantic(40°N - 39°S but absent south of 13°S in eastern sector); tropical Indo-Pacific with extensions into higher latitudes in western boundary currents)[3]
- Diaphus richardsoni Tåning, 1932 (Agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets)[3]
- Horned lanternfish, Diaphus splendidus (Brauer, 1904) (in Agulhas current southward to 31°S; Atlantic (40°N to 28°S, but absent south of 10°S in eastern sector); Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Slopewater lanternfish, Diaphus taaningi Norman, 1930 (over west coast continental shelf/slope southward to 24°S. Amphitropical species in Atlantic(western sector; tropical waters to 42°N; eastern sector: southward from Mauretanian upwelling region to South African region)[3]
- Watases lanternfish, Diaphus watasei Jordan and Starks, 1904 (Over east coast continental shelf/slope southwards to about 30°S)[3]
- Longfin lanternfish, Diogenichthys atlanticus (Tåning, 1928) (Atlantic (50°N - 48°S), Indian Ocean (22° - 45°S) and Pacific (35°N - 35°S, but absent in equatorial waters west of 130°W and near Hawaii)[3]
- Diogenichthys panurgus Bolin, 1946 (In Agulhas current to about 38°S and in Indian Ocean (19°N - 05°S))[3]
- Risso's lanternfish,Electrona risso (Cocco, 1829) (off east and west coasts of South Africa. Widespread in Atlantic (55°N - 40°S), Mediterranean, Indian Ocean (0° - 40°S), Tasman sea and Cook Strait, and eastern Pacific (42°N - 20°S))[3]
- Barne's lanternfish, Gonichthys barnesi Whitley, 1943 (Off east and west coasts, south of 30°S. Convergence species in all 3 oceans (30° - 40°S))[3]
- Gymnoscopelus braueri (Lönnberg, 1905) (Circumglobal between Subtropical convergence and Antarctica)[3]
- Southern blacktip lanternfish, Gymnoscopelus piabilis (Whitley, 1931) (off west coast in Benguela upwelling region)[3]
- Hansen's lanternfish, Hygophum hanseni (Tåning, 1932) (From 30°S on west coast to 33°S on east coast. Convergence species (30° to 43°S) in all 3 oceans)[3]
- Bermuda lanternfish, Hygophum hygomii (Lütken, 1892) (West of Cape Peninsula and off east coast (25° - 37°S))[3]
- Hygophum proximum Bekker, 1965) (South to about 37°S in Agulhas current; Indian Ocean (25°N - 10°S))[3]
- Luminous lanternfish, Lampadena luminosa (Garman, 1899) (In Agulhas current. In all 3 oceans (20°N - 20°S) with extensions into higher latitudes in western boundary currents)[3]
- Lampadena notialis Nafpaktitis and Paxton, 1968 (Off east coast and cape peninsula; convergence species in all 3 oceans)[3]
- Mirror lanternfish, Lampadena speculigera Goode and Bean, 1896 (Off west and southeast coasts. Atlantic (66° - 35°N and 35° - 45°S), Indian Ocean (30° to 45°S) and Pacific Ocean (30° - 45°S))[3]
- Onderbaadjie, Hector's lanternfish, Lampanyctodes hectoris (Common in Benguela uprising region)[3]
- Lampanyctus achirus Andriashev, 1962 (Southern Benguela upwelling region, off south and east coasts, north to about 31°S)[3]
- Lampanyctus alatus Goode and Bean, 1896 (Off all South African coasts; Atlantic (46°N - 38°S), Indian Ocean (0° - 39°S)[3]
- Lampanyctus ater Tåning, 1928 (Off all South African coasts; Atlantic (58° - 17°N and 15° - 40°S) and Indian Ocean (12° - 44°S))[3]
- Southern lanternfish, Lampanyctus australis Tåning, 1932 (Off all South African coasts; Circumglobal convergence species(33° - 43°S with northern extension to about 27°S in eastern boundary currents))[3]
- Lampanyctus festivus Tåning, 1928 (off all South African coasts. Atlantic(53° - 18°N and 28° - 40°S with northern extension to 12°S in Benguela current and Indo-West Pacific.)[3]
- Lampanyctus intricarius Tåning, 1928 (In southern Benguela upwelling region. Atlantic (65° - 32°N and region of subtropical convergence) and Indo-Pacific (region of subtropical convergence, with northern extension to 18°S in eastern boundary currents)[3]
- Lampanyctus lepidolychnus Bekker, 1967 (off all South African coasts, circumglobal convergence species (23° - 48°S))[3]
- Lampanyctus lineatus Tåning, 1928 (Taken once at 34°12'S, 16°35'E)[3]
- Lampanyctus macdonaldi (Goode and Bean, 1896) (West of Cape Peninsula, Circumglobal between subtropical convergence and Antarctic polar front)[3]
- Lampanyctus nobilis Tåning, 1928 (In agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets. Atlantic (40°N - 21°S), Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Lampanyctus pusillus (Johnson, 1890) (Off all South African coasts. Bisubtropical species in all major oceans)[3]
- Lampanyctus turneri (Fowler, 1934) (In Agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets. Tropical and subtropical waters between south China sea and western Indian Ocean)[3]
- Lampichthys procerus (Brauer, 1904) (Off Cape Peninsula, circumglobal convergence species (32° - 48°S) with extensions into lower latitudes in eastern boundary currents)[3]
- Lobianchia dofleini (Zugmayer, 1911) (Off all South African coasts. Mediterranean, Atlantic (50°N - 40°S), Indian Ocean (23° - 38°S), Tasman sea and south Pacific(region of subtropical convergence))[3]
- Cocco's lantern fish, Lobianchia gemellarii (Cocco, 1838) (off all South African coasts. Worldwide in tropical/subtropical waters.)[3]
- Flaccid lanternfish, Metelectrona ventralis (Bekker, 1063) (West of Cape Peninsula in Southern Benguela upwelling region; Curcumglobal subantarctic species (36°-51°S))[3]
- Myctophum aurolaternatum Garman, 1899 (in Agulhas current south to about 31°S)[3]
- Myctophum nitidulum Garman, 1809 (In Agulhas current and off west coast in Agulhas water pockets)[3]
- Notolychnus valdiviae (Brauer, 1904) (off all South African coasts)[3]
- Notoscopelus caudispinosus (Johnson, 1863) (in Agulhas current south to 34°S. Broadly tropical in Atlantic (42°N - 37°S) and Indian oceans)[3]
- Notoscopelus resplendens (Richardson, 1845) (off all South African coasts)[3]
- Protomyctophum subparallelum Tåning, 1932 (off west coast at Vema seamount, Circumglobal in region of subtropical convergence with northern extension to 30°S in eastern boundary currents)[3]
- Protomyctophum normani Tåning, 1932 (once west of Slangkop lighthouse; Circumglobal convergence species (36° - 43°S))[3]
- Scopelopsis multipunctatus Brauer, 1906 (off all South African coasts)[3]
- Symbolophorus barnardi (Tåning, 1932) (occurs off all South African coasts)[3]
- Symbolophorus boops (Richardson, 1845) (Southern Benguela upwelling region north to 25°S; circumglobal in and south of subtropical convergence)[3]
- Symbolophorus evermanni (Gilbert, 1905) (Agilhas current south to about 33°S; tropical Indo-Pacific)[3]
- Taaningichthys bathyphilus (Tåning, 1928) (off east coast (30° - 33°S); widespread in all three oceans)[3]
- Taaningichthys minimus (Tåning, 1928) (taken at 34°15'S, 16°00'E; Atlantic (40° - 20°N and 08° - 38°S), Indian Ocean (20° - 30°S); central and eastern North Pacific)[3]
- Triphoturus nigrescens (Brauer, 1904) (In Agulhas current south to about 40°S; Indian Ocean (08°N - 15°S) and Pacific Ocean (30°N - 30°S))[3]
Family: Neoscopelidae – Blackchins
- Neoscopelus macrolepidotus Johnson, 1863 (off Natal between 27° and 30°S)[3]
- Neoscopelus microchir Matsubara, 1943 (one record off Natal (27°45'S, 32°44'E), both sides of the Atlantic and western Pacific)[3]
- Scopelengys tristis Alcock, 1890 (one record at 33°25'S, 27°54'E; also all 3 major oceans)[3]
Order Notacanthiformes
[edit]Family: Halosauridae – Halosaurs
- Gilbert's halosa