I got this guy from a local wholesaler, however after getting home, I think there may have been a language barrier. I interpreted it as a 'male Lobos wrasse', but after some research I found nothing under that. Please help! [emoji17]
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I got this guy from a local wholesaler, however after getting home, I think there may have been a language barrier. I interpreted it as a 'male Lobos wrasse', but after some research I found nothing under that. Please help! [emoji17]
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I have one of these as well, how can I identify a female when I'm at the lfs? I'd love to have a pair of them.Its a male Cirrhilabrus lubbocki, or lubbocks wrasse. Yous is the Bali variant.
I have one of these as well, how can I identify a female when I'm at the lfs? I'd love to have a pair of them.
Thank you.Females are uniformly pink with a black spot on the caudal peduncle, though females of closely related species look very similar. Personally I would recommend getting another species of fairy or flasher wrasse, as females in captivity usually transition to males and males are more aggressive towards males of the same species than males of a different species.

The one in the lower middle.
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How can you tell that he has already turned male?
Looks like a female pylei.

