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Blog about diving in Burma and Thailand

Common bannerfish vs schooling bannerfish vs moorish idol

29/9/2021

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Banner fish and Moorish idol are common but oh so pretty tropical fish living in the Andaman Sea and other warm oceans. But did you know there are two kind of bannerfish and how to tell one from the other?
Common bannerfish vs schooling bannerfish vs moorish idol

Fish identification : Longfin bannerfish VS schooling bannerfish VS Morrish Idol…​

​1. The Moorish Idol, Zanclus cornutus

The Moorish idol (aka  Zanclus cornutus) is the easiest to tell appart; with its classic shape and long pointed nose was featured in the Pixar movie Finding Nemo. With its exotic appearance and mystical name, it inspires a feeling of warm and relaxed tropical reefs. 
​
They were originally classified as a type of butterflyfish. Fossils of similar extinct species have been found and the species now has her own family, the Moorish idols are the only surviving member of the Zanclidae family…

The Chaetodontidae are very colourful fishes that are popular with divers and aquarists. The family consists of ten genera with about 120 species. They mostly inhabit coral reefs but some have become adapted to temperate and deep waters.
The Moorish Idol, Zanclus cornutus
The Moorish Idol, Zanclus cornutus
The Moorish Idol
Distinctive features: The body of Moorish idols is circular in shape and very narrow in width. The dorsal spines are elongated backwards in a filament that lengthens as the fish ages and lags behind while swimming. It has a protruding tube like a nose that puckers up at the end.
The mouth has a yellow saddle above and bristle-shaped teeth. The main colour of the body is white with alternating bands of black and pale-yellow bars. The eyes are set high away from the mouth and in adults there are bumps above the eye.
Where do moorish idols live?
 
Often seen alone, Moorish idols also form pairs or occasionally small schools, especially juveniles. They are diurnal fish, sticking to the bottom of the reef at night, adopting a drab coloration. Generally, Moorish idols prefer flat reefs and shallow waters.
Their habitats are East Africa, the Indian Ocean, Persian Gulf and the Ducie Islands; Hawaii, southern Japan, and all of Micronesia; they are also found from the southern Gulf of California to the south Peru.

There are two types of bannerfish in the Indian Ocean

Bannerfish, are members of the butterflyfish family (Chaetodontidae).  While both types can be encountered when diving Thailand or Myanmar, we see the schooling bannerfish more often then the "common" bannerfish. They are very difficult to tell one from the other but usually if they are schooling they are Heniochus diphreutes while if they are alone or no more than three individuals, they are usually Heniochus acuminatus.

2. The schooling bannerfish, Heniochus diphreute

Heniochus diphreutes, is the gregarious kind and very rarely seen alone hence why it is commonly called Schooling bannerfish. Some divers also name him false moorish idol.
The schooling bannerfish, Heniochus diphreutes
The schooling bannerfish, Heniochus diphreutes
Distinctive features: The first 3 rays of the dorsal fin are very small and black color. They are followed by a very long 4th ray (the same length as the body), white, which forms a "whip".
The body is white with 2 large vertical black bands. The first begins in front of the dorsal fin, crosses the insertion zone of the pectorals and continues until the end of the pelvic and on the anterior margin of the anal. This black area overflows on the base of the whip. The second black band goes from the base of the dorsal, just behind the whip, and goes down to the anal fin, which it covers only in its posterior part, reaching its tip.
A black area connects the 2 eyes through the forehead. A black spot is also present on the muzzle, which is pointed and ended in a small mouth.
The base of the pectoral fins is black then the rays are yellow. The dorsal behind the whip and the caudal are yellow. The pelvic muscles are pointed.
schooling bannerfish in the similan
schooling bannerfish
Schooling bannerfish
Heniochus Diphreutes
Where do schooling bannerfish live?
 
The schooling bannerfish is widespread throughout the tropical, subtropical and temperate waters of the Indo-Pacific from the eastern coast of Africa, Red Sea, Polynesia and Hawaii and from south Japan to Kermadec Islands (New Zealand).
The schooling bannerfish prefers external reef slopes and channels. It has a large depth range and is usually observed at 5–30 m depth, but may reach 210 meters deep in some places.

​3. Heniochus acuminatus, aka long fin bannerfish

The Heniochus acuminatus, commonly known as the longfin bannerfish, reef bannerfish, pennant coralfish, or coachman, usually live alone, in pairs or in small group.
Long fin bannerfish and Moorish idol in the background
Longfin bannerfish (front) and Moorish idol (in the background)
Where do longfin bannerfish live?
 
The common bannerfish is present in tropical and subtropical waters of the Indo-Pacific basin, from the eastern coasts of Africa, the Red Sea included, to Polynesia and from southern Japan to the south of the Great Barrier Reef.
The longfin bannerfish appreciates the relatively deep waters of lagoons, channels and sheltered outer reef slopes 15 to 75 meters deep.
Distinctive features: The first rays of its dorsal fin stretch into a long white filament.
The body is white with two black vertical stripes. The head is white, the eyes are black and connected to each other by a black band. The muzzle, spotted with black, stretches forward with a small terminal protractile mouth. When they are young, they don't have a white area on the back.
Juvenile common bannerfish
Juvenile common bannerfish have barely no white between the yellow tail and the first dark band.
Here is an infographic to allow you to better see the differences between these 3 fish
The common bannerfish fish (h. diphreutes) can easily be confused with its congener the gregarious bannerfish (h. acumulatus).
​The most visible differences are: a longer muzzle for the common bannerfish, no yellow scales on its body, a rounder breast and yellow pectoral fins. On closer inspection, we will also recognize them at the tip of their anal fin. Check the common bannerfish the tip is two-colored, in the gregaire bannerfish the tip is white (the demarcation of black is a little higher)
Pennant fish (common bannerfish), schooling bannerfish, Morrish Idol... ​How to differentiate them?

Reed also...

The hawksbill turtle: the critically endangered sea turtle
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Scorpion fish identification: stonefish vs devil vs scorpionfish
​
The cuttlefish : fish, alien or something else?


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Camille Fogarolo 

Camille has been traveling the world since her mid twenties and dived many seas before finally settling down in Thailand in 2012. With her husband Franck, they opened The Smiling Seahorse liveaboard to offer cruises in the most unexplored area of South East Asia and became quite the experts when it comes to diving in Myanmar! Proud mother of two she still travels as much as she can and usually joins a dive trip to Mergui Archipelago every month.

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  • When & Where
    • Schedule and Prices
    • Destinations >
      • North Andaman Thailand >
        • Similan Islands
        • Surin Islands >
          • Richelieu Rock
        • The essential Underwater photo Guide to diving Thailand
      • South Andaman Thailand >
        • Phuket & Koh Phi Phi National Parks
        • Koh Lanta National Park
        • Koh Lipe and Tarutao National Park
      • Mergui Archipelago >
        • Liveaboard diving holiday in Myanmar
        • Burma's best dive sites
        • The Ultimate Underwater photo Guide to diving Burma
  • ABOUT
    • Our Boat >
      • DELICIOUS FOOD
    • Diving in Thailand in 2024-2025
    • Diving in Myanmar/Burma in 2024-2025
    • Blackwater diving in Thailand and Myannmar
    • Marine life in Thailand's Andaman Sea
    • Marine life in Mergui Archipelago
    • Dive Courses >
      • Learn to Dive
      • Continue diving education
      • Rescue diver
      • Professional Dive Courses
      • Hone your dive skills with a specialty course
      • Photo coaching in Thailand on the Smiling Seahorse
    • Guest Book
    • FAQ
  • Plan your trip
    • Our hotels recommendations
    • Khao Sok National Park
    • Taxi services >
      • Taxi services to and from Ranong
      • Taxi services to and from Phuket
      • Taxi services to Tap Lamu and Khao Lak
    • 10 things to do around Ranong
  • PROMO
    • HOT DEALS
    • Special Expeditions >
      • 8D Special Marine Bio with Gavin Miller - 10 Nov 2025
      • 8D Whale shark expedition - 20 March 2026 - North and South
  • gallery
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