Japanese lates
Kingdom
Phylum
Order
Family
Genus
SPECIES
Lates japonicus
Weight
33
73
kglbs
kg lbs 
Length
130
51
cminch
cm inch 

The Japanese lates (Lates japonicus), also known as the akame (from the Japanese 赤目, アカメ, literally "red eye") or Japanese barramundi, is a species of fish found in Japan. A bottom-dweller restricted to estuarine habitats and large rivers in the Pacific coastal western parts of the country, it is threatened by habitat destruction. As it is similar to the related barramundi, it was classified as the same species until 1984.

Appearance

The Japanese lates has a comparatively long and compressed body with a large mouth. It is a metallic grey in overall colour, with a bluish tint, darker upperparts, and lighter underparts. Its fins are greyish black with white tips, and its pupils are red. While similar to the barramundi, it differs in several features. It has a taller and deeper body (averaging a much greater size), longer third dorsal and second anal spines, fewer pectoral fin rays, more scales, and fewer gill rakers. It reaches an officially recorded maximum length of 130 cm (51 in) and a maximum weight of 33 kg (73 lb).

Geography

Habits and Lifestyle

The Japanese lates is a bottom dweller in the freshwater shallows, estuaries, and the ocean. It is known in the south-western part of the Japanese main islands, where it is found in the seas around Tosa Bay, in Kōchi Prefecture, Shikoku, and near Miyazaki City in Miyazaki Prefecture, Kyushu. It is believed to spawn there, and younger fish are found up the Ōyodo and Shimanto Rivers. The barramundi is believed to replace it in the Ryukyu Islands.

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The Japanese lates has long been known to fishermen, but because of its relative rarity and shyness, it achieved "almost legendary" status. For some time, scientists were uncertain which fish was the "akame" of legend, and some suspected Psammoperca waigiensis. It is kept in aquaria and cultured for food, but is poorly known in the wild. In February 2010, the first video of the akame living in its natural surroundings was broadcast on the BBC, in a report on the University of Tokyo's research project where Japanese lates were fitted with ultrasound tracking devices.

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Lifestyle

Diet and Nutrition

Population

References

1. Japanese lates Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_lates
2. Japanese lates on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/110462086/110462118

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