Please ID These 2 Butterflyfish

The Reef Expert

New member
I found this photo on the estranged site freshmarine.com mislabeled as Chaetodon punctofasciatus but I know its not. I think it's some kind of rare butterflyfish "eight" something?
yhst-33477391359232_2103_4741117

http://ep.yimg.com/ca/I/yhst-33477391359232_2103_4741117
 
sorry I was going to originally ask about that one and another one, but i found out what the other one was before I was finished posting so the title was messed up.
 
Thanks for the ID. Google search turns up right. It's a really beautiful fish!
chastrc.jpg

http://www.natuurlijkmooi.net/images/chastrc.jpg
Chaetodon_Striatus_Banded_Butterfly.jpg

http://www.petleaderscyprus.com/assets/images/Chaetodon_Striatus_Banded_Butterfly.jpg
91016_large.jpg

http://content6.eol.org/content/2009/04/25/20/91016_large.jpg

The Last pic appears to be a postage stamp from Suriname. Suriname is pretty hard to get to and ship out of being It is one of the least developed countries in the world. Would getting this fish be like getting liprogramma's from Curacao?
 
C. Striatus, the Banded butterflyfish, is among the most common butterfly fish in the Caribbean. They are numerous along the S.E. coast of the US from Florida to the Carolinas, and I always catch a few Gulf Stream strays in late summer/fall here in NJ, as do collectors in Connecticut, R.I., and N.Y. They are less numerous up north than Spotfins and Four Eyes, but most summers I catch three or four.
I see more Banded BFs on most shallow Caribbean reefs than any other BF species, almost always in pairs. Small ones are very similar to small Four Eyed BFs. Four Eyed BFs lose the bands at about an inch.

I think they, along with most other Caribbean BFs, are difficult to feed unless you have unlimited access to live blackworms. They can be maintained, but a lot of effort is required to keep them healthy until they accept the usual aquarium foods. Large ones are nearly impossible to keep successfully. I've been able to raise just a couple of these fish. Spotfins and Four Eyed BFs are much easier. Not very much comes out of the Caribbean these days, and valuable shipping space goes to Angelfish, Grammas, etc. There are a couple of collectors who sell directly via the internet, and they always have Banded BFs listed. They are common in Florida, and not expensive. Any decent local shop should be able to get you one. Get a small one.
 
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