Blackvent Damsel
Dischistodus melanotus
Blackvent Damsel is a small Indo-Pacific reef damselfish associated with shallow coral-rich habitats. It is not a targeted angling species and is seldom of fishing interest except as incidental reef catch.

Identification points
- Small damselfish with a pale body and a distinctly dark black ventral/posterior belly area
- Rounded reef-fish profile with a relatively short, compact body
- Typically seen close to coral heads or rubble rather than in open water
Habitat
Shallow coral reefs and lagoonal reef edges, usually close to branching and rubble coral where it shelters within complex structure.
Bait notes
Not a standard game fish; anglers usually do not target it intentionally. It may take tiny pieces of shrimp, fish, or small reef-presented baits if hooked incidentally.
Behavior
A territorial reef herbivore/omnivore that stays close to cover, forages in the water column and over hard substrate, and retreats quickly into coral when disturbed.
Caution
Handle carefully around coral to avoid cuts and reef damage; not a species commonly kept for food, so consumption guidance is limited and it is best treated as a release fish.
Fishing notes
If encountered while reef fishing, use very light tackle and small hooks near coral structure; most captures are accidental on small bait rigs. Release promptly and avoid contact with coral.