Search Species
Search for fish species by common or scientific name, or use filters to browse by water type, size, temperament, and difficulty.
Found 275 species

Three-spot righteye flounder
Samariscus triocellatus
This is a tiny little Indo-Pacific flounder that lives right on sand and rubble around reefs, and it can be ridiculously hard to spot once it settles in. The coolest part is the three eye-like spots (ocelli) and the way it kind of creeps along the bottom hunting small benthic critters at dusk.

Tidepool snailfish
Liparis florae
This is a little coldwater snailfish that literally lives in tide pools on exposed Pacific coast rock, hiding under algae and stones when the surf is crashing. It has that classic soft, tadpole-ish snailfish look and a suction-disk belly, so it can cling in place instead of getting tossed around. Super cool fish biologically, but it is absolutely not a normal home-aquarium species unless youre set up for a chilled marine system.

Tiger watchman goby
Valenciennea wardii
This is one of those classic sand-sifting sleeper gobies that will stay busy all day taking mouthfuls of sand, picking out tiny foods, and spitting the clean sand back out. Super chill temperament, but it really wants a mature tank with a real sandbed so it can do its thing without slowly starving. Also heads-up: they can redecorate by burying frags and making little bulldozer trenches.

Tubeshoulder
Mentodus mesalirus
Mentodus mesalirus is a deep-sea tubeshoulder - one of those wild ocean fish that can squirt a bioluminescent fluid from a special tube organ near the shoulder. It is not an aquarium species at all, but it is seriously cool from a biology standpoint because that light-producing setup is basically its whole claim to fame.

Vanuatu goatfish
Upeneus vanuatu
Upeneus vanuatu is a small deep-water goatfish from off Vanuatu that lives way down around 191-321 m, so its natural water is cooler and darker than typical reef goatfish. Like other goatfish it has the little chin barbels for rooting around for food, but honestly this one is more of a scientific oddball than a realistic aquarium fish because of the depth it comes from.

Variable blenny
Starksia variabilis
Tiny Caribbean blenny that hangs out right on the rock, peeking from little cracks like a curious periscope. The lips have neat black bars and the patterning shifts a bit, which is where the whole variable thing comes from. Give it lots of nooks and it will put on fun perch-and-dart antics all day.

Variegated cardinalfish
Fowleria variegata
This is a small, mottled reddish-brown cardinalfish that likes to hang around rockwork and rubble and really comes into its own once the lights dim. In a calm reef tank its a super chill, slow swimmer, and if you keep a small group they tend to hover together and look way more natural.

Vaubans gurnard
Lepidotrigla vaubani
Lepidotrigla vaubani is a small, bottom-dwelling marine gurnard (sea robin) from the western Pacific. Like other gurnards its "walking" pectoral fin rays are the fun part - it creeps along the seafloor poking around for little crustaceans and worms, way more personality than you would expect from a bycatch-type fish.

Vermiculated croaker
Ophioscion vermicularis
Eastern Pacific marine demersal croaker found over sandy and muddy bottoms in shallow waters; feeds on benthic invertebrates and is common in local markets. Aquarium care information is limited compared with typical ornamental marine species.

Vitiaz wolf-eelpout
Lycenchelys vitiazi
Lycenchelys vitiazi is a tiny deep-sea wolf-eelpout from the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, and it is one of those weird, super-elongate trench fishes that basically never shows up in the hobby. It has only been recorded from very deep water near Paramushir Island, so its real "care" is more of a science/lab thing than an aquarium fish situation.

Weedy cardinalfish
Foa fo
Foa fo is a tiny little Indo-Pacific cardinalfish that hangs around sheltered reefy areas and weedy/mucky spots, usually staying pretty low-key and unobtrusive. Like other cardinalfish, the really cool bit is the breeding behavior - the male mouthbroods the eggs, so you will sometimes see a chunky-looking jaw when he is holding a clutch.

Whitebanded sharpnose wrasse
Wetmorella albofasciata
This is one of those tiny, cryptic wrasses that spends a lot of time weaving through rockwork and poking into little cracks like it is on a constant scavenger hunt. The big eyes and sharp snout give it a weird-cute "mini predator" look, and it really shines in a peaceful reef where it feels safe enough to come out and cruise.
