I would agree. Either C. bispinosa x C. sheppardi or x C. ferrugata.
Colouring looks a bit more like C. sheppardi to me, but it could easily be either.
I've certainly seen high-orange Coral Beauties, but not with anything like that colouration - particularly the edging on the dorsal and anal fins...the caudal too.
Wow... what a fish! That is probably a Centropyge bispinosa/ C. ferrugata hybrid. C. bispinosa/ C. shepardi hybrids are documented from Guam, but there are no current exports from there and coral beauties there are EXCEPTIONALLY rare... I've seen just ONE in months of diving there... and I was excited about it! It was kind of funny as I chased a coral beauty that whole dive amidst many C. shepardi (which are rather common there)...
Was there any info on this fish Michael where you pulled that image from?
Interesting how there is such an abrupt line down the middle of the fish, its like someone cut half a deepwater coral beauty and half a rusty and glued them together.
Rusties seem to be a promiscuous bunch for the small range they have... just this past year I've received both a rusty/shepardi hybrid (arrived dead) and a rusty/flame...
Rusties seem to be a promiscuous bunch for the small range they have... just this past year I've received both a rusty/shepardi hybrid (arrived dead) and a rusty/flame...
LOL! Maybe.
But couldn't it just be a very pale Coral Beauty? Some lack much color.
I also vote Rusty if its a hybrid.
Seems Centropyge are not too discriminating, if you know what I mean ( Cough )..
Even if you take color aside, looking at only morphology you could see the input from ferrugata... there are many aberrant bispinosa, but this guy's a hybrid...
I tried, John. But he's at a bad angle so I cannot get a very good look at his true form.
But your probably right, having seen many more hybrids than I ever have.
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