Bermuda blue angelfish
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Bermuda blue angelfish | ||||||||||||||
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Holacanthus bermudensis (Goode, 1876). |
The Bermuda blue angelfish, Holacanthus bermudensis, is a species of marine angelfish of the family Pomacanthidae.
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[edit] Description
An adult blue angelfish is blue-brown in color with green hues and bright yellow on the tip of its tail and fins. Their young, however, have a completely different coloration. A young blue angelfish is dark blue with a yellow tail and some yellow on its fins. It also has vertical blue bars on its body. As it ages, the bars fade away and the body color becomes lighter and some browns and greens are added.
The blue angelfish can grow up to 18 inches in length. It has a large mouth and comb-like teeth. It is often collected for aquariums. This fish occasionally breeds with the queen angelfish, which is very similar to it. This hybrid is called the townsend angelfish. An adult blue angelfish can produce a loud thumping sound that warns predators and also startles divers.[citation needed]
[edit] Habitat
It is found in the western Atlantic part of from Bermuda, the Bahamas and Florida to the Gulf of Mexico, and also to Yucatan, Mexico.
The blue angelfish tends to stay near rocks, coral, and sponges at depths of between 6½ and 300 feet (2-92 m). It also lives around boulders, in caves, and crevices in shallow water. Young blue angelfish tend to live in bays and channels.[citation needed]
[edit] Diet
The blue angelfish prefers to eat sponges, but also eats algae, coral, and tunicates. Young blue angelfish eat parasites on other fish at "cleaning stations".[citation needed] Also 95% of their diet consists on sponges.
[edit] Reproduction
The blue angelfish has no specific breeding period, so they breed year round. When they do breed, the female can release from 25 to 75 thousand eggs each day, totaling up to 10 million eggs each breeding cycle. The eggs are transparent and contain a drop of oil for buoyancy. The eggs hatch shortly after, and the fish that emerge are in a pre-larvae state and they do not have guts, eyes, or fins, and are attached to a sacs. After two days, the yolk sac is gone and the fish are in a larvae state and eat plankton. These fish grow very fast.
[edit] Lifespan
The blue angelfish can live up to 20 years.[citation needed]
[edit] Status
This species is not endangered, and is common in Florida, whiler rarer further south in the Caribbean.
[edit] References
- "Holacanthus bermudensis". FishBase. Ed. Ranier Froese and Daniel Pauly. March 2008 version. N.p.: FishBase, 2008.
- Patton, Casey. Blue Angelfish Florida Museum of Natural History Ichthyology Department. Online
- Blue Angelfish. Rock and Wreck: Fishes of NC. 11 April, 2002. Online
- Blue Angelfish Primasoft. 20 Feb 2003. Online
- Brough, David. Blue Angelfish Animal-World. Online
- Michael, Scott W. The Blue and the Queen Angelfish Advanced Aquarist's Online Magazine. 14 Aug 2004. Online
- IUCN 2007. 2007 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 22 November 2007.