Yet another wrasse id

starkii

New member
Fairy certain on this one (see what i did there). Its an old picture but planning a new setup and been going through a friends pictures and fell in love.
 

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It looks like a long fin fairy wrasse or a joanallenae flasher wrasse. I'm not even 100% sure they are even separate species.
 
Male Cirrhilabrus naokoae. Named after Dr. Hiroyuki Tanaka's wife, naoko. interestingly, this species and its holotype was described from specimens obtained via aquarium trade and not from the wild. one of the first pieces showed up in hong kong where my friend jacky wong bought it and sent it to dr tanaka.

Yes a member of the Rubriventralis complex where joanallenae is also from. a highly confusing group with various yet to be named species.
 
I don't agree 100% with it being a naoke! that was my first thought as well. But after looking at the fins a little more, they look to long to be a naoke. All of the naoke I have seen in person as well as the one I owned had shorter pelvic fins.
 
My thinking was Male C naokoae. Speaking to my friend earlier he said it definitely didn't come in as one and the picture was taken in may 2011. When was this species described?
 
This one's really obvious. 100% Naoko male. The yellow stripe is obvious. I can see if there's confusion with the other rubriventralis complex but not with naoko. It's very distinctive.

The fins can go longer than those in the photos btw. This male isn't terminal yet. And naoko will never arrive with the correct ID from source collectors. Having unboxed numerous specimens direct from Indonesia, I'm quite sure on that. In fact almost all cirrhilabrus will come either wrongly named or listed as assorted wrasses from Indonesia.

Naoko was described before 2011. The official year is on the pdf or fish base.
 
This one's really obvious. 100% Naoko male. The yellow stripe is obvious. I can see if there's confusion with the other rubriventralis complex but not with naoko. It's very distinctive.
Exactly.

And this one is very hungry (skinny) too. :( I don't see it lasting much longer...
 
The only other fairy it could be is Cirrhilabrus sp 3, the kenya fairy wrasse, which also has the yellow stripe, but i do believe that the fish pictured above is naoke.
 
The only other fairy it could be is Cirrhilabrus sp 3, the kenya fairy wrasse, which also has the yellow stripe,
No; Kenya/Kwazulu does not have a distinct margin between the red/yellow like naoko does. Also the fins on Kenya/Kwazulu are not solid black.
 
Kwazulu is cirrhilabrus sp 2, kenyan is cirrhilabrus sp 3. You are correct in your statements about kwazulu. But the kenyan, or cirrhilabrus sp 3 does have the yellow stripe, but the available photos of it are of an age where it could still be transitioning and the margin could become more distinct. It also has black fins. That being said i do believe the fish in question in this post is indeed a naoke.
 
If you read that thread you will also see that kevin kohen believes that both are the same spexies as rubriventralis. And whether you believe they are the same species or not, the physical attributes, such as color and pattern are different enough between the varieties, as to be able to visually differentiate rubriventralis, sp.2, and sp. 3.
All i did was point out that sp. 3 has a yellow margin and black fins. If it is its own species someday, fine, if it is the same as sp. 2 and rubriventralis, fine. All im saying is there are visible diffeences.
 
Hey, thats my pic:thumbsup: Find anything else you like Stu

I think it came in with some Cirrhilabrus rubriventralis and wish i'd had a tank for it at the time. They all came in skinny if memory serves.

Its also very much still alive and fat now, or it was around a month ago.
 
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