The Pacific goliath grouper has a robust, oblong body. The area between the eyes is wide and flat. The margin of the preopercle has fine serrations and an angled edge. The dorsal fin contains 11 spines and 15-16 soft rays while the anal fin has 3 spines and 8 soft rays. The caudal fin istail rounded. The head and body are grey or greenish in colour marked with pale blotches and small dark spots which are scattered over the upper head and body, as well as being on the pectoral fins. Subadult fish which are less than in length are overall greenish to tawny brown in colour with diagonal, irregular darker brown bars on the body and caudal fin. The juveniles have heavy spotting on the head, the soft-rayed part of the dorsalfin and the pectoral, pelvic, and caudal fins, They have 5 diagonal black bars on the body which reach onto the dorsal and anal fins and there is a black bar on base of the caudal fin. This is one of the largest species of grouper, attaining a maximum total length of.
The Pacific goliath grouper is found on offshore rocky reefs as adults, although it has also been recorded in inshore areas. The juveniles inhabit mangroves, estuaries, lagoons and bays. It has been recorded feeding on sharks, rays, crustaceans, cephalopods, other fishes and even sea snakes and mammals. Little is known about its biology but it is thought to be similar to the Atlantic goliath grouper.
Taxonomy
The Pacific goliath grouper was first formally described as Serranus quinquefasciatus in 1868 by the Frenchzoologist and artistMarie Firmin Bocourt with the type locality given as the mouth of Río Nagualate on the Pacific coast of Guatemala. Felipe Poey assigned the giant and goliath groupers to the genusPromicrops but in 1972 this was designated as a subgenus of Epinephelus. However, these species are still each others closest relatives.
Utilisation
The Pacific goliath grouper is a sought after quarry species for recreational and commercial fisheries in the entirity of its range. It has declined over much of its range, and, in Colombia smaller goliath groupers of lengths less than are regarded as the most valuable. This leads fishermen to target small and sexually immature groupers which threatens the local survival of the species by taking the fish they get an opportunity to reproduce.