ID on this Wrasse?

falconut

New member
I bought this guy about a year ago hoping it would eat and live. It didn't last 2 days. I really liked it and haven't seen one of these again. Does anybody have an idea as to what type of Wrasse it is? It was labeled as a Red/Blue Fairy Wrasse.
http://community.webshots.com/photo/550226399/2974613550043589559vogQiB
http://community.webshots.com/photo/550226399/2219593860043589559bWzoYg
http://community.webshots.com/photo/550226399/2519186980043589559GxiBnE
Hopefully somebody can tell from the photos, because I definitely can't take any better pictures.

Thanks,
Craig
 
nano4brains - I couldn'd find a hognose wrasse on liveaquaris.com. A google search on hognose wrasse didn't come up with anything either.
 
the black spot near the tail screams JUVY to me. It may be a female, which is why you're having trouble finding out what it is...definitely a juvenile cirrhilabrus though.
 
I agree it's either a juvi or a female cirrhilabrus. It's very hardto Id them at this stage. Unless of course your Bronco or Dr H.. I'm sure they will be able to id it.
 
Craig,

It seems to me a small female/ juvenile of Cirrhilabrus solorensis.

Apparently not C. rubripinis. It has bluish fins and a black spot on caudal peduncle, and then I suspect that it is one of the C. cyanopleura- complex. But it has a too red body so there is a possibilty that it will be a young form of an unnamed one shown in my recent article for Reef Central (see fig. 22). I have several shots of this undescribed one but the female/ juvenile is slightly different in coloration.
 
I was gonna guess solarensis, but wasnt confident about it.

My cyanopleura had the dot on the tail.

Mr. Tanaka, whats the deal with Cyanopleura/Lyukyensis. I've seen Lyukyensis listed as a junior pseudonym for Cyanopleura, and I've seen it listed as a seperate species.
 
H.Tanaka - Nice article. Mine didn't have any white on the bottom, does that develop as they mature? Also, she (assumed) would turn darker (purplish-blue) when scared or hiding, from what I can remember. It was a while ago.
 
Richconley,
C. lyukyuensis is not valid (Randall) and many ichthyologists agree but Allen et al. state that it is valid. It is now regarded as a junior synonym but future study may reveal that it becomes a true species. Now I follow Randall. There is only a subtle difference between the two.

Thank you falconut. I will write on flashers soon.

fishermania,
Females of C. flavidorsalis are entirely red with a white belly and no dark area on head.

This is the female (4cm) of the undescribed species from southern Sulawesi. It is reddish with a whitish abdomen.

122564SuF4.jpg
 
fishermania - mine will never develop since it died after 2 days about a year ago. Have been trying to find another ever since.

H.Tanaka - since it changed red to blueish, does this mean it was a flasher wrasse?
 
I am not sure if yours was a fairy wrasse but juveniles of any flashers have a small white patch above eye and also flashers are more slender, and orange-red overall, not deep red like yours. I do not know any flasher that matches the coloration of yours.
 
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