
The jack-knifefish (Eques lanceolatus) is a species of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the family Sciaenidae, the drums and croakers. It is native to the western Atlantic Ocean, where its distribution extends along the eastern coasts of the Americas from the Carolinas in the United States to Brazil, including the Caribbean. Other common names include donkey fish and lance-shaped ribbonfish.
The jack-knifefish (Eques lanceolatus) is a species of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the family Sciaenidae, the drums and croakers. It is native to the western Atlantic Ocean, where its distribution extends along the eastern coasts of the Americas from the Carolinas in the United States to Brazil, including the Caribbean. Other common names include donkey fish and lance-shaped ribbonfish.
==Taxonomy== The jack-knifefish was first formally described as Chaetodon lanceolatus in 1758 by Carl Linnaeus in the 10th edition of his Systema Naturae with its type locality given, erroneously as India, when it should have been the Bahamas. In 1793 the German physician and naturalist Marcus Elieser Bloch described a new species, Eques americanus, from the Western Atlantic and placed it in the new monospecific genus Eques. Bloch's genus name was considered to be preoccupied by a name Linnaeus had used for a subgenus of Papilio, and Constantine Samuel Rafinesque created Equites to replace Bloch's Eques, however, Linnaeus's name is considered to be invalid so Eques is now considered valid. Fishbase treats the genus as monospecific with this species as the only species but other authorities include the spotted drum (Equetus punctatus) in the genus, treating Equetus as a synonym of Eques. This taxon has been placed in the subfamily Sciaeninae by some workers, but the 5th edition of Fishes of the World does not recognise subfamilies within the Sciaenidae which it places in the order Acanthuriformes.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).