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Related FAQs: Coradion Butterflyfishes, Butterflyfish Identification, Butterflyfish Foods/Feeding/NutritionButterflyfish Compatibility, Butterflyfish Behavior, Butterflyfish Systems, Butterflyfish Selection, Butterflyfish Disease, Butterflyfish Reproduction,

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/The Conscientious Marine Aquarist

Butterflyfishes of the Genus Coradion

The Genus Coradion, Coralfish Butterflies

Bob Fenner

Coradion altivelis, Australia

Butterflyfishes for  Marine Aquariums
Diversity, Selection & Care
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by Robert (Bob) Fenner

 The Coralfish genus and its three member species are rare Butterflies in our interest; and this is a great shame; these fishes are attractive, interesting behaviorally and for the family Chaetodontidae, of moderate sturdiness. With careful selection, placement and a bit of catering as to tankmates and feeding, most folks can keep Coradion species under captive conditions.

            Relating what constitutes a good specimen, selecting it, suitable compatible livestock and nutrition is the purpose of this article.

The Genus Itself:

There are three species of Coradion rarely making their way into the trade in the west. This lack of participation is mostly a matter of what I call the “founder effect”: Because there is no present demand, these fishes aren’t collected, and therefore there’s little awareness of them, and hence little to no demand… and around and around. Am hoping that our sharing here will interrupt this cycle of unknowing.

The members of the genus hail from parts of the Indian and Pacific oceans. Though widespread in their range, none of the Coradion species is “common” or very abundant. Coralfish species are collected for the trade from a few places in limited numbers; mostly from the Philippines and Indonesia. Better, though more expensive specimens can be had out of Australia and Papua New Guinea at times.

Species on Parade!

Delineating them can be done on the basis of eye-spots and caudal peduncle markings: Coradion species Coralfish (Coradion altivelis McCulloch 1916, the Highfin Coralfish; Coradion chrysozonus (Cuvier 1831), Orange-Banded Coralfish; C. melanopus (Cuvier 1831), Two-Eyed Coralfish), all from the tropical western Pacific and eastern Indian Ocean and are very similar in appearance (note presence of eyespots: none, one, two in order, by species).

Coradion altivelis McCulloch 1916, the Highfin Coralfish. Indo-West Pacific; Andaman Sea to S. Japan, Indonesia, PNG to N. Australia. Common in the Gulf of Thailand. This one off of Heron Island, Australia's GBR. No ocellus and squarish caudal mark denote this species. To six inches in length.

 

Coradion chrysozonus (Cuvier 1831), the Goldengirdled Coralfish. Indo-Pacific; Australia, New Guinea, Indonesia to the Philippines. To six inches in length. This one in Raja Ampat, N. Indonesia. An oval black caudal peduncle marking and single ocellus denote this species. Mainly feeds on sponges.

  

Coradion melanopus (Cuvier 1831), the Twospot Coralfish. Western Pacific: Indonesia to Papua New Guinea and Bismarck Archipelago. To 15 cm. in length. N. Sulawesi pix. Note two ocelli.

 Compatibility:

            Coradions, like most all Butterflyfishes, are shy and retiring; never aggressive to other fishes, and this genus leaving stinging-celled life (e.g. corals, anemones…) alone; though they will consume most sponges and any worm or crustacean that will fit in their prising jaws.

            Chaetodontids of all sorts are not so fortunate regarding more agonistic species beatings and harassment. Beware of stocking your Coralfish with the usual bully suspects (Triggers, large Basses and big Wrasses, Morays and such). Stock them only with other non-agonistic species.

            As very easygoing species, it’s a good idea to introduce your Coradion early on in your stocking plan; so that it settles in, gets the “lay of the land/tank” ahead of more aggressive feeders.

            And best to only stock one specimen to a tank; even if the system is huge; these species are found in  pairs/twos at spawning times in the wild; but most are encountered solitary; and when another comes about, there is more often than not some chasing behavior that ensues. Unless you can be sure that you are buying an established pair, go with one to a system.

Selection: Several Important Criteria

Age/Size: like the tale of Goldilocks, tres ursids, and average kinetic energy (heat) of porridges, you want to select for not too small, nor too large, but just about right size of specimens of Coradion. For ease of understanding “total length” we’ll understand here to be from the tip of the mouth to the end of the tail fin. Specimens of 3-4 inches overall length are “in the zone” and ones smaller and much larger less desirable.

A just under three inch specimen of Coradion chrysozonus at a Los Angeles marine wholesaler. Too small individuals rarely adapt to captive conditions, hiding, refusing foods, being too shy, weak from the rigors of starvation, metabolite poisoning and general stress of collection, holding and shipping to recover. Similarly too-large (great than 4 inch) ones get too badly beaten up in custody; and just don’t adjust to living in the small volumes which are our aquariums.

 

Feeding: A Fish That Eats Is (Generally) A Fish That Lives.           Is it? An all- time great “acid test” of whether to consider a purchase or no is that the animal is eating… foods that you can get and intend to use. Non-feeding should negate buying. ASK your dealer to feed the fish in your presence.

Obvious Damage: Look at the body closely for missing or raised scales. A few blems here and split fins won’t disqualify a purchase for me; but any bleeding, reddish areas on the body or fin spine origins will. Look especially at the “beak”; the terminus of the animals’ mouth. This is way too often damaged in collection and shipping… by keeping the specimen in too small a bag and NOT laying the bags on their sides; causing the fishes to lie sideways… and rest in the dark.

Are the eyes clear; the fish “bright”; that is, aware of your presence, the other animals moving near it? It should be.

Country Source: Though most often collected and shipped out of Indonesia and the Philippines, the more expensive alternate sources of Australia, Papua and Singapore are far hardier.

 

System: “It’s the Environment Dummy”:

            An important element in keeping Coradion species; indeed all butterflyfishes in captivity; is beyond providing optimized and stable conditions, allowing the system itself to cure. To be clear, though they are found in several coastal habitats, these fishes live on and require “reef quality” settings; with copious amounts of healthy live rock. Allowing your set-up to age a few months ahead of their introduction is requisite.

            Adequate space is also important. Butterflies fare poorly in small volumes. I would not stock even one specimen in under a hundred gallons; as they just do not adapt well to not being able to swim about, having a sense of being able to escape out of view. On this last; a note re décor; making free-standing bommies, arches, overhangs and caves is vastly preferable to a standing wall of rock.

           

Foods/Feeding:

Coradion Butterflies are notably Sponge feeders in the wild; but don’t despair. IF you can’t secure and culture sufficient live AND palatable Poriferans as specimens or ancillary live rock biota, you may find dried sponges of use at a large “oriental food” store; as these are used for human nutrition as well.

In captivity, preferred foods span a very large selection of items meaty whole and prepared. With practice most specimens will learn to take frozen-defrosted; though you may have to mix these initially in with live (Mysis, Glassworms…) increasing the percentage of non-live over times. As above; prepared blended foods of commercial or DIY make can make up the bulk of feed for these Butterflies in time. More frequent, smaller meals are preferred; two, three times daily. A favored trick in urging Coradion to feed is the use live Mysids, though frozen/defrosted are generally accepted with gusto by healthy specimens.

 

Disease/Health:

            Unfortunately, the sore-spot in keeping Chaetodontids; they are proverbial poster children for biological and environmental diseases. Amongst most all fish groups, Butterflyfishes are the first to show signs of infection, parasitism and when conditions are drifting… like aquatic versions of canaries in mining caves; look first to your BF/s for signs of impending problems.

            As always it is imminently important to exercise careful observation of your livestock; for behavioral changes. Problems that are caught very early can often be readily remedied; ones that go too far are almost impossible to correct.

            Rather than copper, formalin et al. conventional medications, I strongly advise that you look into quinine compound use (Quinine Sulfate, Chloroquine Phosphate) should your system be struck with a Protozoan concern. If you can’t mail-order these medications, look to your veterinarian for help.

            Prevention of problems is best for sure; with careful selection of stock, isolation/quarantine for a few days to rest the specimen/s up, allow your observation; and timely dips/baths, acclimation to your main/display systems. Assuredly healthy BF specimens I would skip quarantine on actually; as this more often than not is not as valuable as expediting new purchases with a simple pH adjusted freshwater dip/bath to knock off external issues.

Reproduction: Not Yet

            As far as I’m aware, there are no ways to sex Coradion externally; nor have there been reports of their captive spawning and rearing. Butterflyfishes are considered to be oviparous pair spawners; perhaps monogamous; with seasonal matings in later Winter and Spring; egg-bulging females being nudged by their male cohort and both parties ascending toward the surface, releasing gametes into the water column and providing no parental care.

 

Cloze:

            Coralfish species are not impossible to keep, but do strictly require sincere effort on our parts in finding and selecting viable specimens, providing them with a suitable environment and assuring they’re receiving adequate nutrition. Can you do this? Of a certainty, yes; just do take your time. As the saying goes; “little happens fast that’s good in being an aquarist”. Taking your time with these fishes will result in their acclimation and long-term husbandry success.

 

Coradion species Coralfish (Coradion altivelis McCulloch 1916, the Highfin Coralfish; Coradion chrysozonus (Cuvier 1831), Orange-Banded Coralfish; C. melanopus (Cuvier 1831), Two-Eyed Coralfish), all from the tropical western Pacific and very similar in appearance (note presence of eyespots: none, one, two in order, by species).

Coradion altivelis McCulloch 1916, the Highfin Coralfish. Indo-West Pacific. To six inches in length. This one off of Heron Island, Australia's GBR. No ocellus and squarish caudal mark denote this species.

Coradion chrysozonus (Cuvier 1831), the Goldengirdled Coralfish. Indo-Pacific; Australia, New Guinea, Indonesia to the Philippines. To six inches in length. Off of Pulau Redang, Malaysia and N. Sulawesi. An oval black caudal peduncle marking and single ocellus denote this species.

Verticals (Full/Cover Page Sizes Available
Coradion melanopus (Cuvier 1831), the Twospot Coralfish. Western Pacific: Indonesia to Papua New Guinea and Bismarck Archipelago. To 15 cm. in length. N. Sulawesi pix. Note two ocelli.

Verticals (Full/Cover Page Sizes Available
Butterflyfishes for  Marine Aquariums
Diversity, Selection & Care
New eBook on Amazon: Available here
New Print Book on Create Space: Available here


by Robert (Bob) Fenner
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