i would be more concerned with the pylie wrasse then the mystery wrasse, ive had the cebu pylie 6 times and 5 were very aggressive towards other wrasse's
Just arrived at my LFS...super male cirrhilabrus cf. Laceolatus
Is it a Pin Tail, and by the way, what exactly is a super male. Is there any difference with a terminal phase?
Cirrhilabrus cf. lanceolatus is the designation given to pintail wrasses as they are not scientifically described yet.
Terminal phase is the same as super male. Each stage a wrasse goes through is a phase, starting post larval as juvenile/ female, becoming an initial phase male and finishing as a terminal phase male.
Possible, but very, very unlikely. In the wild the subdominant male would look for new territory before reverting to female. In an aquarium it will hide and avoid the dominant male or be killed, but in extraordinarily rare cases it may revert.
It just depends on you. Are you patient enough to wait for a female /juvie to transition. I personally am not, but I will buy females rather than males because they are less expensive.
I had a Xenojulis margaritaceus for a few years and he was an awesome fish . a bit boisterous by flipping corals and rockwork but he was so cool looking . thanks for sharing and bringing back memories !
My Xenojulis was shy the first two weeks, but after that he has become quite bold. To me he behaves more like a miniature Dragon wrasse, hunting, knocking over frags, and even making attempts at eating cleaner shrimp almost as large as he is.
How long have you had him now? Mine won't come out if anyone is around the tank, or if a fish is around, and I've even seen him get scared by a hermit crab. :hmm5: I have a harlequin and cleaner shrimp, various crabs/snails, and a clam. He did pick at the clam's mantle until I bumped up my feedings. I haven't seen him nip in over a year.