Fish o’ the day | Coral Beauty Angel

Posted by gerard on October 17, 2008 under Saltwater Fish | Be the First to Comment

Fish o' the day | Coral Beauty Angel

The Twospined Angelfish, Dusky Angelfish, or Coral Beauty (Centropyge bispinosa), is an omnivorous marine angelfish. Some individuals have a dark purplish blue body with yellow to red stripes, and usually an electric blue rim; in others are orange stripes dominate, with the purple distributed in spots. Some bright orange forms are very similar in appearance to the golden angelfish, Centropyge aurantia.  The twospined angelfish is native to the Indo-Pacific where it lives in coral reefs and lagoons. It reaches a maximum length of 3 inches (8 cm). It eats algae.

When kept in an aquarium they are distributed throughout the tank. They prefer reef tanks over fish only tanks, but are suitable for both. This species does not seem to be suitable for beginners, as the difficulty is rated high.

Buy at saltwaterfish.com.

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Text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

Fish o’ the day | Flame Angel

Posted by gerard on October 13, 2008 under Saltwater Fish | Be the First to Comment

Fish o' the day | Flame Angel

The flame angel, Centropyge loricula, is a marine angelfish of the family Pomacanthidae found in tropical waters of the Pacific Ocean at depths of between 15 and 60 m. Its length is up to 15 cm.  The flame angel is found in clear lagoon and seaward reefs from the lower surge zone to a depth of 60 m. It is secretive and stays near shelter. It feeds on algae and forms harems of 3 to 7 individuals.  Coloration is bright orange-red with a vertical elongate black blotch and 4 or 5 bars on the sides, the posterior part of the dorsal and anal fins with alternating short purple-blue and black bands. Specimens from the Marquesas lack the vertical black bars.
In the aquarium
It has been reared in captivity. Frequently exported through the aquarium trade.  In captivity, this species feeds on a variety of food including live brine shrimp, frozen meaty foods as well as spirulina, seaweed sheets and pellets. Easy to feed.  The Flame Angel is known to be shy upon introduction to an established aquarium (especially smaller specimens) but within a week will gain confidence and is then constantly seen grazing around live rock during the day. Will fight with other fish if challenged for space or kept with similar species (dwarf angels) in a small tank. Some texts advise that this should be a final addition to a tank.

Range
It is found in various reefs of Oceania, most common in Marshall, Line, and Cook Islands.   The fish is also, although less commonly, found in the Hawaiian islands.

Buy at saltwaterfish.com.
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Text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.