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Bicolour Parrotfish
fish

Bicolour Parrotfish

Cetoscarus bicolor

Loud, colourful, and the unsung architects of every white sand beach. Listen for their crunching as they bite the reef.

Least Concern common sightings
Size
25–90 cm
Depth
1–30 m
Sighting odds
common
IUCN status
LC

About this species

Parrotfish use beak-like fused teeth to scrape algae from coral, ingesting the limestone in the process. They digest the algae and excrete the limestone as fine white sand — a single large parrotfish produces about 90 kg of beach sand per year. Bicolour parrotfish are among the largest, reaching 90 cm.

Fun facts

  • A single fish makes 90 kg of beach sand per year
  • Sleep at night in a mucus cocoon they secrete
  • Change sex from female to male as they age
  • You can hear them crunching coral underwater

Want to dive with bicolour parrotfish?

Tell us when you're coming and we'll plan a dive that maximises your chances.