Yeppers...
Pteroidicthys amboinensis (AKA ambon scorpionfish), which isn't a waspfish, BTW.
Very cool little fish, but as mentioned, they can be tuff to wean off of live ghosties and guppies. Fortunately, like leaf scorps, they do tend to train to eat from a small net.
Now for the not-so-good news...for whatever reason, these fish don't do very well in captivity, and nobody I know of has kept one even for a year (the best we've done is 10 months out of 4 specimens, shortest was about 2 weeks). Fish that seem to be doing well and eating are often simply found dead for no apparent reason.
I do have an idea or two for our next try with these fish, one of them being keeping them a bit cooler, low 70's (74*F max.) for starters, and vitamins C and B6 plus beta glucan to boost the immune system.
If you're new to scorps, give
THIS ARTICLE a read. There's a brief section discussing this species.
Also, you might want to give
Tools of the Trade: Equipment & Techniques to Convert your Fish onto Frozen a read as well.
Here are a couple of photos:
This fish is actively shedding its cuticle:
The big yawn:
Yellow ambon:
Feed me first!
HTH