Ternate Chromis
Chromis ternatensis
Ternate Chromis (Chromis ternatensis) is a small reef-dwelling damselfish recorded from tropical Indo-Pacific coral habitats. It is typically seen in loose groups above reef slope and lagoon corals, but reliable species-specific biology and angling information are limited.

Identification points
- Small, deep-bodied chromis with the typical oval damselfish profile
- Uniform bluish to silvery reef-fish coloration without obvious bars or long fins
- Usually seen schooling just above branching coral heads on reefs
Habitat
Tropical coral reefs, especially reef slopes, outer reef faces, and sheltered lagoon reef structure where small planktivorous chromis hover a few meters above branching corals.
Bait notes
Not a common target species. If encountered by anglers, small bits of shrimp, fish flesh, or tiny planktonic-looking flies/jigs may attract it, but it is generally of little sport-fishing value.
Behavior
Usually forms small schools or loose aggregations in the water column, picking plankton and tiny drifting prey. It stays close to cover and retreats into coral branches when threatened.
Caution
Reef fish handling can damage coral habitat; use care and follow local reef and marine-park regulations. As a small tropical reef species, consumption guidance is limited and local advisories should be checked.
Fishing notes
Best approached with ultra-light tackle or small flies around shallow coral edges if targeting reef baitfish; use a very small hook and subtle presentation. Avoid fishing directly over fragile coral.