Capros has an oval, compressed and deep body with the depth of the body being greater than the length of the head. The depth of the body fits into the
standard length between 1.7 and 1.9 times. The dorsal profile of the head is concave with a conical snout. The large eyes which are approximately equal in diameter to the length of the snout. The large mouth is very protrusible, protruding out as a short tube. There are a pair of spiny plates near the
symphysis if the jaws. Each jaw has 4 or 5 rows of narrow with a patch of very small
vomerine teeth arranged in a cloverleaf shape and there are a small number of similar teeth on the
palatine. The bones of the head have rough surfaces and spines. The
dorsal fin is deeply incised, the incision separating the 9 or 10 robust, grooved spines from the 23 to 25 branched soft rays. The
anal fin is supported by 3, short, thick spines and between 22 and 24 soft rays. The
pectoral fins are short and rounded having a length that is half of the length of the head and contains 15 fin rays. The pelvic fin has a single robust spine and f thick soft rays and the fin does not reach much beyond the second spine in the anal fin. The spines and rays in the paired fins have lots of spinelets on them. The boarfish is covered in small scales that feel rough when touched. The
lateral line has 20 tubed scales and terminates underneath the rearmost spine of the dorsal fin. The overall colour of the head and body is silver-gold with the spiny parts of the dorsal fin being black with a wide red upper margin, the rest of the dorsal fin, the anal fin and the caudal fin are black with dusky yellow margins. The pelvic fins are red. Fishes found in deeper water, deeper than are a red in colour, which may be broken up by yellow bars. The boarfish has a maximum published
total length of , although is more typical. ==Distribution and habitat==