Peacock FlounderEyes Of A Peacock Flounder

They say there is a mate for everyone. Difficult to imagine with this face.

But there are many peacocks on the reefs and many more juveniles. So, apparently this face is sexy to other flounder.

Or maybe they fall for each other before that one eye migrates to meet the other and the fish takes on that flattened, side-stroke look.

Actually, these guys are at once beautifully camouglaged and loudly colored. From above they are quite striking.

Four Eyed Butterfly FishFour-eyed Butterflyfish

This four-eyed butterfly was found on Coco View Wall. The reefs were thick with small tropicals like this.

Mostly, we found them on the reef-top in very shallow water.

We would often see these and other butterfly fish in pairs.

 

Slender FilefishSlender Filefish

Filefish are so named because of the hard forward spine that is an adaptation to their dorsal fin. It allows them to get in a hole, wedge in with that spine and make themselves nearly impossible to extricate.

Not sure that's how this one at Menagerie reef uses his spine, although he is clearly endowed like his cousins.

In my exeperience, these tiny guys rely on hiding vertically among the branches of soft corals, slowly but deliberately moving around the trunk as you move closer.

It was a pretty effective tactic against this picture predator. It took quite a while to get him in a position to make an image.