# Juvenile batfish hidden in seagrass > Williams S.L. URL kanonis: https://discover.unhas.ac.id/publications/pub_scopus_84939879338 Jurnal / Konferensi: Coral Reefs Tahun terbit: 2014 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00338-014-1194-6 ISSN: 07224028 Kuartil SJR: Q1 Citations: 2 ## Authors - Williams S.L. ## Abstract Juvenile batfishes in the genus Platax (Ephippidae) are known to have striking coloration that is considered to be protective Juvenile Indo-Pacific P. teira and P. orbicularis have broad dark and silver vertical bands. This coloration contrasts sharply with blue waters and resembles, at least to the human eye, floating debris or seaweed, cages, mooring lines, shipwrecks, and aspects of other habitats where they typically occur. We found Platax teira (longfin batfish) consistently occurring in a shallow bed of the seagrass Enhalus acoroides on Barrang Lompo, one of the many Spermonde islands off South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Their color banding provides virtually no contrast against the seagrass. Seagrass might provide very good habitat for juvenile batfish, although we have found no published reports of juvenile batfishes in seagrass beds. Juvenile batfishes are both herbivorous and carnivorous Herbivory by juvenile batfish hidden in seagrass might help reduce deleterious epiphytes that bloom on seagrasses in the face of coastal eutrophication (Fig. ## Keywords - Seagrass - Juvenile - Fishery - Oceanography - Geography - Biology - Ecology - Environmental science - Geology - Habitat --- Sumber: Discover Unhas — RIMS Universitas Hasanuddin. Saat mengutip, gunakan DOI bila tersedia atau URL kanonis di atas.