Ostracion boxfishes have thick and oblong bodies which are largely encased in a carapace made up of thickened, bony plate-like hexagonal scales which are jointed to one another. The carapace is cuboidal in shape, it is gently rounded on its dorsal surface and flat on its ventral surface. There ara pair of logitudinal ridges on the lwoer flanks but there are no spines on the carapacem which has gaps for the mouth, eyes, gill slits, fins abd caudal peduncle. They do have a protruding snout with a small mouth which has fleshy lips and 15, or less, modereately sized conical teeth in each jaw. The gill splits are short and oblique and sit to the front of the base of the pectoral fins. The dorsal and anal fins are positioned towards the rear. The cuadal peduncle is slender and the caudal fin is a rounded fan.[7] The largest species in the genus is the yellow boxfish (O. cubicum), with a maximum published total length of 45 cm (18 in), while the smallest is the roughskin trunkfish (O. trachys) , with a maximum published total length of 11.5 cm (4.5 in).[6]
Distribution and habitat
Ostracion boxfishes are found in the Indian and PacificOceans from the Red Sea and eastern coast of Africa east[6] as far as the Eastern Pacific between Mexico and Ecuador.[7] One species, the yellow boxfish, has reached the Mediterranean Sea through the Suez Canal.[8] These fishes are solitary species of lagoons and reefs , typically in shallow water.[9]