@Lord_Blackadder is the SA resident fish fundi sure he will be able to identify all the fish that need ID'ing. 
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and you get to id all the different acro's soon to be posted@Lord_Blackadder is the SA resident fish fundi sure he will be able to identify all the fish that need ID'ing.![]()
and you get to id all the different acro's soon to be posted![]()
Heres a few I'm struggling with.
4
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Pic 4 is a blue line trigger. Better pic in my album.
I would just think it is the pic. @richardmatlock can confirm
I do not think it is a monocanthus species as they normally have a spine in the dorsal fin on the head just above the eye.
I know what you mean I am really struggling to identify the lionfish.Impossible to tell from a photo, basically depends on where it came from.
Thanks found it.
Neopomacentrus nemurus.
do we have anyone who works for Ushaka here, thats photographed in one of their displays and perhaps they would know?Impossible to tell from a photo, basically depends on where it came from. If it's local, then P. miles. (Western Indian ocean and some of the Mediterranean = P. miles, Pacific and Eastern Indian = P. volitans.)
Nope, the white freckles and white tail are wrong. It looks a little like a Acanthurus maculiceps, but it is not one that I am familiar with. Where did it come from?Lavenda tang (i think, correct me if im wrong) Acanthurus nigrofuscus
it may well have been a hybrid too, i photographed that in @charl fisher tank, i'll trawl his thread and see if it will shed some light. but you maybe right on the maculicepsNope, the white freckles and white tail are wrong. It looks a little like a Acanthurus maculiceps, but it is not one that I am familiar with. Where did it come from?