sea catfish
Noun: A type of marine fish belonging to the family Ariidae, characterized by being mouthbrooders, where the male typically carries and protects the fertilized eggs in his mouth. These fish are generally not considered suitable for human consumption.
The term "sea catfish" is used to refer to these specific marine fish in biological, ecological, or general descriptive contexts. It is a common name, not a scientific one. * The biologist studied the unique mouthbrooding behavior of the sea catfish. * While fishing in the estuary, we caught a sea catfish and released it, as they are not used for food.
- Ecological Role: In scientific writing, "sea catfish" may be discussed for their role in coastal and estuarine ecosystems.
- The study focused on the sea catfish population as an indicator of estuary health.
- Hardhead Catfish: A common name for a specific species () often called a sea catfish in the Western Atlantic.
- Mouthbrooder: A descriptive term for the reproductive strategy common to sea catfish.
- Marine catfish
- Ariid catfish (scientific family name)
The key distinguishing features in the definition are its marine habitat (sea), its reproductive method (mouthbrooding), and its general lack of culinary use. This separates it from freshwater catfish, which are often farmed for food.
- any of numerous marine fishes most of which are mouthbreeders; not used for food