Oplegnathus is currently the sole recognized genus in the knifejaw family (Oplegnathidae) of marine centrarchiform ray-finned fishes.
[5] The largest, the Cape knifejaw, can reach a maximum length around 90 cm (35 in).
Knifejaws have teeth fused into a parrot-like beak in adulthood.
[6] The earliest records of knifejaws are fossilized beaks, with attached teeth, known from middle Eocene-aged sediments of the La Meseta Formation of Antarctica.
Their early occurrence in Antarctica supports it having temperate climate during the Eocene, and that knifejaws had a wider distribution in the past than today.