Saltcorner
By Bob Goemans
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Tunze 

Sweetlips

Plectorhinchus lineatus

(Linnaeus, 1758)

Lined Sweetlips

Not Reef Tank Suitable

Likely Fish-Only Tank Suitable

Range: Western Pacific Ocean: Philippines and Bali to Niue, north to Southern Japan, and south to New Caledonia.

Size: 20 inches (50 cm)

Natural Environment: Inhabits reef channels and outer-reef faces and slopes and spends the daytime in caves and under ledges at depths between 6 to 150 feet (2 – 45 m) and feeds at night on shrimp, crabs, snails, worms and various other benthic invertebrates and small fishes.

General Husbandry: Occasionally seen in the trade, with the juvenile having a white body with five horizontal black lines, with the adult a silvery body with slanting black lines above the mid body and black spots on the yellow dorsal, anal and tail fins.

Requires a large fish-only aquarium with wide-open swimming areas and areas/caves to take shelter during daytime hours As to diet, newcomers are sometimes shy and difficult to get feeding, therefore require fortified live brine shrimp and/or live glass/grass shrimp to get feeding. Once accepting aquarium foods, a wide variety of frozen and fresh meaty foodstuffs (chopped squid, fish flesh, scallops, shrimp, clam, etc.) can be offered and fed several times daily. Any ornamental crustaceans and small fish in the aquarium will also be consumed.

Taxonomy:

    Order: Perciformes

    Suborder: Percoidei

    Family: Lutjanidae

    Genus: Plectorhinchus

FYI: Usually seen as juveniles in the trade, however, they grow fast and soon outgrow most hobbyist aquariums.

May stir up the substrate looking for food.

Experience Level: Intermediate

Temperament: Peaceful

Diet: Carnivore

Coral Safe: Yes

Invertebrate Safe: No

Fish Safe: With caution

Acclimation Time: 30 minutes+

Aquarium Environment: Fish-only aquarium

Tankmates: Peaceful or non-aggressive

Minimum Tank Size: 240 gallons

Temperature Range: 72 - 82°F (22 – 28°C)

Specific Gravity: 1.020 -1.026

pH: 8.0 - 8.5

 Plectorhinchus lineatus (Lined Sweetlips)
Photo © Bob Goemans
 Plectorhinchus lineatus (Lined Sweetlips)
Photo © Robert Patzner
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Boyd Enterprises