Flame Angelfish Care
Posted Under: Fish
The most brilliantly colored of all the dwarf angelfish, the flame angelfish (Centropyge Loriculus) is the most popular and recognizable member of of the genus centroypge, ahead of even the coral beauty angel. Like the queen angelfish, almost everyone in the marine aquarium hobby has at one time either owned a flame angel or at least considered getting one.
The genus centropyge contains 33 species that have been found thus far, making it the largest genus within the marine angelfish complex (Pomacanthidae). Our fish of interest goes by the scientific name Centropyge Loriculus. Its common name is the flame angelfish, so named because it is colored a bright red-orange with vertical black lines down its body. The tips of its anal and dorsal fins are accentuated with neon blue patches.
The flame angel is a little on the high side in terms of price so expect to pay between $40 and $50 US dollars for a specimen. While this may seem like a lot for an ornamental fish, it pales in comparison with rarer angelfish such as the golden angelfish. Considering the effect it has on most onlookers I’d say the price is a steal.
While flame angelfish are commonly thought to come from th waters off Hawaii, they are actually collected around Christmas Island and the Marshall Islands. True Hawaiian flame angelfish are colored slightly differently and are very hard to find. They red throughout their bodies with very thin, black vertical lines.
As with all members of the genus centropyge this angelfish can be aggressive towards other tank mates. They are particularly hostile towards members of the same species. Putting two flame angelfish together in a small tank is generally a bad idea. The same goes for housing two members of the same genus together. Such an endeavor should only be attempted if the marine aquarium in question is large enough, 75 gallons or larger.
The flame angelfish should be kept in an aquarium no less than 50 gallons. Ideally, you’d want something like a 75 gallon or larger aquarium for them. The added space limits hostilities stemming from territory to a minimum. This is assuming the tank isn’t already full of fishes. They require caves and holes throughout the rock scape so your live rock arrangement should reflect this.
As with all dwarf angelfish, flame angelfish have been known to nip on corals in a reef aquarium. Predicting when such behaviour will start occurring is not possible. There have been reports of flame angelfish turning on corals after months of leaving them alone. Such behaviour is common among all dwarf angelfish. No exceptions. Unfortunately, once they start nipping they usually don’t stop.
Flame angelfish are grazers in the wild. They constantly pick at the substrate and rocks that surround their territory. Tiny crustaceans and algae make up the bulk of their diet.
Ensure they are given a varied diet within a marine aquarium. Provide a balanced mix of meaty foods along with algae based foods. Spirulina, seaweed, frozen mysis shrimp and other meat or algae based gel cubes should be part of their everyday diet. A recommended dry food for flame angels include pellets and flake foods from highly reputable brands like new life spectrum, formula one and formula two. A great food that contains everything they find in the wild is the pygmy angel formula gel cubes by ocean nutrition. They are only available in frozen cubes.
In the wild, flam angelfish form harems, a single male will dominate up to 7 females. Females maintain a separate territory within the males territory. Every evening the male approaches each female in his harem until he chooses to mate with one of them. He then assumes courting behavior. Fins are flared, he darts around the female in circles and assumes mating colors.
Courting ensues anywhere from 5 to 15 minutes until they finally spawn. The male nudges the female up in to the water column until they are perfectly positioned to release eggs and sperm at the same time. The actual mating process takes no longer than half a second. Having mated, they disappear into the rocks.
While there have been many cases of flame angel pairs spawning in the home aquaria, there have been no cases of their larvae being raised to adulthood. Dwarf angelfish have only been successfully raised on a commercial level by companies with a lot of money backing them. And even then, success came not more than 7 years ago.
The biggest breakthrough in angelfish breeding happened in Hawaii around 2002. It was found that the key ingredient to raising dwarf angelfish larvae was in finding an appropriate food for them. The larvae food had to fulfill 3 criteria. It had to be nutritious enough for the larvae, small enough for them to eat and it had to move in a specific manner as to elicit a feeding response.
Frank Baensch of Reef Culture Technologies collaborated with three others to find an appropriate food, and they were successful. What followed was the captive breeding of not just the flame angelfish but of rarer species such as the bandit angelfish, colin’s angelfish and the Japanese pygmy angelfish. All very expensive fishes in the hobby. The breakthrough food item is rumored to be a type of copepod naulpii.
Such success has not been achieved by hobbyists or even small scale breeders. Baby brine shrimp and rotifers are the mainstay of home breeding but both of them do not seem to elicit a feeding response from dwarf angelfish larvae. As a result the larvae usually starve to death. So the key is finding an easily bred food that would work on this species. Until that time comes we are left with buying wild caught flame angelfish and even the occasional captive bred ones.




