Titan Triggerfish
Balistoides viridescens
Titan triggerfish is a large Indo-Pacific reef fish best known for its bold behavior and powerful jaw. It usually lives over coral and rubble around lagoon and outer-reef slopes, and can be very territorial, especially near nests.

Identification points
- Large oval body with a steep forehead and small eye high on the head
- Small mouth with strong beak-like teeth for crushing shells
- Dark green to brown body with blue lines/markings and a pale tail base patch
Habitat
Shallow coral reefs, reef flats, lagoon edges, seaward reef slopes, and sandy or rubble-bottom areas adjacent to coral heads; adults often patrol territories around nesting sites.
Bait notes
Takes cut bait, squid strips, shrimp, crab, and small reef-fish baits; also hits stout metal jigs or reef-associated lures when actively feeding. Because it is not a prime target in most areas, many anglers release it.
Behavior
Diurnal predator and benthic forager that crushes hard-shelled prey such as urchins, mollusks, crabs, and small reef animals. It is highly territorial and may bite or charge divers and anglers near nests.
Caution
Use caution around nests and reef territories; titan triggerfish can inflict painful bites and aggressive charges. In some regions reef fish can carry ciguatera risk, so local consumption advisories matter.
Fishing notes
Fish heavy reef tackle and short leaders to keep it out of coral; present bait tight to bottom near reef edges and current lines. Set the hook hard and wind immediately—its jaw and reef habitat make quick control essential.