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The pattern looks close to my ornate leopard wrasse, but as the others have said, the colors are odd.
Thank you, but it is not photoshopped, I took it on my iPhone check out this other pic
That’s definitely not a potters wrasse. The short nose wrasse has its name for an obvious reason and the anal fins are much larger on the Potters LeopardWhen I bought it the guy said it was from Hawaii and said he thought it was a potters wrasse? Looks nothing like it though
Now I’m more sure of my male melagris answer!I found this pic from when I first got it in feb 2018
Now I’m more sure of my male melagris answer!
Thank you @4FordFamily it does look similar to those in the pictures I saw online but not exact
It looks more male in the Feb photo which makes me wonder if the wrasse has some sort of infection, illness, or parasite causing it to lose color.Maybe It’s because it’s transitioning as you said
It looks more male in the Feb photo which makes me wonder if the wrasse has some sort of infection, illness, or parasite causing it to lose color.
Or perhaps it is aberrant, which can progress as it ages but that doesn’t look “normal” for aberrant coloration, if that’s a thing, haha!
It could well be but they don’t transition backwards, or at least I’ve never heard of that actually happening.So earlier on before I posted it in the let me id your wrasse and someone from their thinks it is a macropharyngodon pakoko which was a male and now is transitioning back to a female?