Neon Fusilier
Pterocaesio tile
Neon fusilier is a slender reef fish of shallow coral and rocky reefs in the Indo-Pacific. It forms fast-moving schools and feeds mainly on zooplankton in the water column.

Identification points
- Bright neon-blue to greenish-blue body with a yellow tail and fins
- Slender fusilier shape with a pointed snout and deeply forked tail
- Schooling reef fish often showing a narrow yellow stripe along the side
Habitat
Clear tropical reef habitats, especially outer reef slopes, drop-offs, and channels above coral or rocky bottoms; usually schooling in midwater over reefs.
Bait notes
Not a common target for bait fishing; if taken incidentally, small pieces of shrimp or fish and tiny plankton-style flies/jigs may draw strikes.
Behavior
A diurnal planktivore that stays in loose to dense schools and moves continuously in the water column, often above reef structure and along current edges.
Caution
Sharp reef habitat can cut hands and tackle; avoid crowding coral, and observe local reef-fishing rules because fusiliers are primarily reef forage fish in many areas.
Fishing notes
Best approached with light tackle and small hooks or micro-jigs around reef edges and current lines; it is more often observed than pursued by anglers and should be released quickly if caught.