Let Me ID Your Wrasse!

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Sorry best I could do with my iPhone and a swimming fish lol. Bought as a red wrasse lol

Really is pretty good description lol probably 3" nose to tail, does not borrow in the sand that I have seen. But was in a bare bottom for a year and now in a tank with sand.

taryvyqy.jpg



-Alex-
Cirrhilabrus rubripinnis. No sand required for Cirrhilabrus (fairy) wrasses.

heres another hunter

fwrassr.jpg
Female Cirrhilabrus of the lubbocki complex.
And it probably is lubbocki, but these all look so similar as females. It could be: C. lubbocki, C. adornatus (less likely), C. flavidorsalis (the other strong candidate), or even C. marjorie.
 
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rockinzebra457

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I believe it's a C. roseafascia and im gonna try and get a clear pic with my phone because thats all I have.
 
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Ah, now I understand what you're asking.

Those dark spots won't develop until the fish is somewhat mature.
 
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Hunter does it look like my female earles is turning?
There's some signs of it, yes. But in my experience, he/she and the male I presume you already have will work it out and coexist.

I thought he was mature because he came with a female.
That is not C. roseafascia, it is C. jordani, flame wrasse.
Yup; this ^ is correct. And therefore why you'll never see dark spots on the pelvic fins. :)
 

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Opps I got the scientific names messed up. I thought C. Rose was the scientific name for a flame wrasse. Sorry for the confusion.
 

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What am I? A buddy showed me this wrasse. I've never seen one like it before.

azavanat.jpg
 

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Well crappy news. Our wrasse you ID a just a few days ago. I found stuck to a power head and dead the other night. No idea how or why, had ate fine twice that day and night before lights out. And had went to bed like normal. And then found stuck to power head getting up at about 4-5am to use te bathroom. Sucks had that one for going on 3 years...


-Alex-
 
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What am I? A buddy showed me this wrasse. I've never seen one like it before.
Cirrhilabrus pylei, Cebu variant. Which have actually been more common lately than the "traditional" pylei.

Well crappy news. Our wrasse you ID a just a few days ago. I found stuck to a power head and dead the other night. No idea how or why, had ate fine twice that day and night before lights out. And had went to bed like normal. And then found stuck to power head getting up at about 4-5am to use te bathroom. Sucks had that one for going on 3 years...
It may have simply been old age. In the photo, it appeared to be quite large for the species. Some wrasses don't have very long lifespans, and it doesn't help age at the time of purchase is already a mystery.
 
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Macropharyngodon geoffroy; looks to be a young male (but I'd need a photo in better focus to be certain).
 
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