Four-spotted butterflyfish

Chaetodon quadrimaculatus

The four-spotted butterflyfish or fourspot butterflyfish is a species of butterflyfish found in the Pacific Ocean from the Ryukyus, Ogasawara Islands and Taiwan to the Hawaiian, Marquesan, and Pitcairn islands, south to the Samoan and Austral Islands and the Marianas and Marshall Islands in Micronesia.

The fourspot butterflyfish is a marine coralivorous organism. Therefore, its noted geographic distribution, as well as population-level spatial distribution and temporal variation in density, is correlated to relative distributions and abundance of the corals that butterflyfish are dependent on for food.

It is a quite distinct species, but most closely related to the speckled butterflyfish . Together they are basal in the subgenus ''Exornator'', and might be intermediate between the core group of this subgenus and the species of the ''Rhombochaetodon'' lineage. If that is correct, the latter would require to be merged into ''Exornator''. If the genus ''Chaetodon'' is split up, ''Exornator'' might become a subgenus of ''Lepidochaetodon''.

Butterflyfish as a family are a common marine aquarium specimen as a result of their varying colors and patterns, and contribute to 4% of the global fish trade.
Four-Spotted Butterflyfish - Chaetodon quadrimaculatus  Butterflyfish,Chaetodon quadrimaculatus,Fish,Four-Spotted Butterflyfish,French Polynesia,Tahiti

Status

Since fourspot butterflyfish are highly associated with scleractinian coral, they are an indicator of reef health and their relative abundance is contingent on coral reef abundance. With recent global changes in climate, especially the 2015-2016 rise in water temperatures and mass coral bleaching event in the central Indo-Pacific, this species may have experienced a decrease in food resource. Large-scale coral bleaching has also been associated with decreases in both interspecific and intraspecific aggression in butterflyfish. Research in other species of butterflyfish show that local coral bleaching does not have immediate effects on local population abundance of butterflyfish, but does lead to sublethal effects such as decreased growth and reproduction rates.

Behavior

Owning to their obligate dependence on corals, fourspot butterflyfish tend to be distributed in stable feeding territories with high fidelity for each site and male-dominated defense mechanisms. The social structure is dominated by heterosexual, adult pair-bonds, while juveniles are typically solitary. However, there have also been observations of homosexual pair bonds and pair bonds between sexually immature butterflyfish in this genus. Therefore, the evolution of pair bonds may offer benefits beyond increasing reproductive fitness. Other proposed advantages of pair-bonding include increased foraging efficiency and vigilance against predators. Within heterosexual pair-bonds, evidence supports the evolution of sex-specific roles rather than mutual territory defense. In this division of labor, males actively defend territory allowing females to successfully forage and therefore increase their fecundity.

Reproduction

Fourspot butterfly fish typically reproduce in monogamous pair bonds. They reproduce via spawn breeding where the gonochoristic males and females release their respective gametes into the water column for fertilization. Eggs are typically less than 1 mm in their pelagic form and fertilized eggs hatch in approximately 30 hours. Like other butterfly fish in this family, ''C. quadrimaculatus'' has a specialized larval state called tholichthys, where the head is covered by fused plates, giving rise to a distinctive head spination. Although no definitive results have been collected, there is little to minimal or no parental care in this species as a result of their spawn breeding reproductive tactic. After larval development and hatching, juveniles directly settle on coral which offer protection from predators.

Food

''C. quadrimaculatus'' is an obligate, hard coral feeder, an adaptation that is theorized to have evolved approximately 3.2 million years ago. This species is highly dependent on scleractinian corals, an order of Anthozoa where approximately 50% of species are reef-building zooxanthellate. Butterflyfish typically feed from corals by removing individual polyps while leaving the calcareous skeleton undisturbed. They use a picking method where they grip prey with the tips of their upper and lower anterior jaws. Due to their specialized dependence on corals, ''C. quadrimaculatus'' and other obligate corallivorous species have an increased bite rate, pointing to a higher feeding efficiency, than butterflyfish that are facultative corallivores.

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassActinopterygii
OrderAcanthuriformes
FamilyChaetodontidae
GenusChaetodon
SpeciesC. quadrimaculatus
Photographed in
French Polynesia