Shiner Surfperch

Cymatogaster aggregata

The shiner perch is a common surfperch found in estuaries, lagoons, and coastal streams along the Pacific coast from Alaska to Baja California. It is the sole member of its genus. The shiner perch is also known as seven-eleven and shiner seaperch.
A School of Shiner Perch! This large school of fish was circling the Whaletown dock while being pursued by a Red-necked Grebe. When feeding on the surface the fish make a sound like the popping of tiny bubbles. Instead of laying eggs these shiners are ovoviviparous and the females carry the young till they are quite large.  Canada,Cymatogaster aggregata,Geotagged,Shiner perch

Appearance

Shiner perches are similar to tule perches, deep-bodied with a dusky greenish back and silvery sides that have a pattern combining fine horizontal bars with three broad yellow vertical bars. Breeding males turn almost entirely black, the barred pattern being obscured by dark speckles. Shiner perches are distinguished from tule perches by having fewer dorsal fin spines, just 8–9 vs the 15–19 of the tule perch. The rayed part of the dorsal fin has 18 to 23 rays. The anal fin has 3 spines followed by 22–25 rays.

They are one of the most common fish in the bays and estuaries of their range, favoring beds of eelgrass, and often accumulating around piers as well. They feed on zooplankton such as copepods, but have been observed to bottom feed as well.

They are often found with parasitic isopods such as the Elthusa "californica" feeding off of them from their opercular cavity of the gill chamber.

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Status: Least concern
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassActinopterygii
OrderCichliformes
FamilyEmbiotocidae
GenusCymatogaster
SpeciesC. aggregata
Photographed in
Canada