Fiji Blue Devil Damsel Breeding Guide
How the western Pacific Chrysiptera taupou pairs to spawn, with the male guarding and tending the demersal eggs before a difficult pelagic larval phase.
Overview
Chrysiptera taupou, the south seas devil or Fiji blue devil, is native to the western Pacific from the Coral Sea to Samoa and reaches about 8 cm. It lives on reefs and lagoons and is very aggressive toward other small fishes, especially damsels and clownfishes. It pairs up to breed, and the male guards and tends the eggs.
Sexing
Damselfishes show little reliable external sexual dimorphism, and Chrysiptera and Dascyllus are not protandrous hermaphrodites in the clownfish sense. External sexing of C. taupou is unreliable; a functional pair is identified once two fish settle together and the male begins defending a nest site. In practice a compatible male/female pair is identified by behaviour once a hierarchy forms, with the dominant male defending a nest site.
Conditioning
Damsels are hardy omnivores; conditioning relies on varied feeding (frozen and prepared marine foods plus some algae) and stable reef water. Because most species are aggressive, a breeding pair is best given its own territory with ample rockwork so the male can establish and defend a nest site without constant conflict.
Breeding Setup
- Compatible established pair given its own territory
- Temperature 24-26 C, pH 8.1-8.4, stable salinity
- Hard substrate (rock, rubble or shell) for the demersal egg patch
- Plenty of rockwork and hiding places to defuse aggression
Spawning Behavior & Trigger
Breeding takes place in pairs. The male prepares and clears a hard nest site, after which the female lays a patch of adhesive demersal eggs that attach to the substrate. The male fertilises the clutch and then guards and tends it, driving away intruders from the vigorously defended territory.
Egg & Fry Care
The male performs the parental care, guarding the nest and aerating the eggs until they hatch. Across the family Pomacentridae the eggs hatch after about two to seven days depending on species and temperature. Newly hatched larvae measure roughly 2-4 mm and enter a pelagic stage that, depending on species, can last from about a week to more than a month before the young settle and take on juvenile colours.
Common Challenges
The pelagic larval stage is the main barrier to home breeding. C. taupou's marked aggression compounds the difficulty: it harasses other small fish, so a breeding pair needs its own tank or a very large, well-structured system. Pair bonding can be hard to establish given the species' temperament.