Longnose Butterflyfish (Forcipiger longirostris)

Also known as Big Longnose Butterflyfish, Big Long-nosed Butterflyfish, Black Long-nosed Butterflyfish, Coralfish, Extra Longnose Butterfly, Forcepsfish, Long-beaked Butterflyfish, Longbill, Longnose Butterfly, Long-nosed Butterflyfish, Long-nosed Coralfish, Long-snouted Butterflyfish, Long-snouted Coralfish, Pipe-snouted Butterflyfish, Rare Longnose, Rare Longnose Butterflyfish, Very Longnose Butterflyfish, Yellow Longnose, Yellow Longnose Butterfly, Yellow Longnose Butterflyfish

Description

Also known as Big Longnose Butterflyfish, Big Long-nosed Butterflyfish, Black Long-nosed Butterflyfish, Coralfish, Extra Longnose Butterfly, Forcepsfish, Long-beaked Butterflyfish, Longbill, Longnose Butterfly, Long-nosed Butterflyfish, Long-nosed Coralfish, Long-snouted Butterflyfish, Long-snouted Coralfish, Pipe-snouted Butterflyfish, Rare Longnose, Rare Longnose Butterflyfish, Very Longnose Butterflyfish, Yellow Longnose, Yellow Longnose Butterfly, Yellow Longnose Butterflyfish.

Found in pairs over seaward reefs, rich in coral growth.
They feed on small crustaceans.
Length 22cm
Depth - 3-200m
Widespread Indo-Pacific

The eye is almost black on Forcipiger longirostris, where as Forcipiger flavissimus shows more white in the eye!

Butterflyfishes have very fine hair like teeth that enable them to pick out small organisms inaccessible to most other fish for eating.
They thrive mainly on a diet of coral polyps, tentacles of featherdusters and Christmas-tree worms. As these food sources all zap back into their shells, butterflyfishes need to be able to hover motionless while picking at the coral and to dart swiftly over short distances to get the worm before it retracts. They do this by using their Pectoral fins as oars to brake, sprint, turn and even reverse. Ref: https://www.fishbase.de/summary/Forcipiger-longirostris.html

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