scubaseason

Batfish

Platax teira

Sighting evidence at HMAS Brisbane, Raja Ampat

Batfish

Photo: Albertini maridom · CC BY-NC

Disc-shaped, highly curious schooling fish that aggregate in the water column at cleaning stations and reef pinnacles. Batfish — most commonly orbicular or teira species — are striking for their vertical body shape, long trailing fins, and habit of approaching divers closely and holding position directly in front of masks. Juveniles mimic dead leaves or toxic flatworms for camouflage. Schools of adult batfish at cleaning stations are common on Indo-Pacific reefs and reliably produce close-range encounters. They feed on algae, invertebrates, and small zooplankton.

Evidence at this site

No confirmed records on file at this site

Batfish is listed as a curated species here based on historical reports.

How is this calculated?

Sighting evidence is compiled from iNaturalist observation records within a set proximity radius, filtered for quality-grade observations. “Last confirmed” is the date of the most recent research-grade record. Record count covers a rolling 24-month window. Confidence reflects record count, recency, and consistency of seasonal signal.

Also seen at other sites