Let Me ID Your Wrasse!

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Can anyone id this juvenile wrasse? I bought it as a Green Corris but I know that it is not that.

It's certainly a Halichoeres species. You can play "match the picture" here, if you wish: Fish Identification

My best guess: Halichoeres poeyi

As it matures and gets some better coloration, it'll be easier for a positive ID.
 
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It's certainly a Halichoeres species. You can play "match the picture" here, if you wish: Fish Identification

My best guess: Halichoeres poeyi

As it matures and gets some better coloration, it'll be easier for a positive ID.

I agree, whn I saw the pic I thought an immature H. poeyi too, it is definitely in the sub group of Halichoeres wrasses of the Americas.
 
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Hello,

Live aquaria is telling me this is a juvenile negrosensis. Looks like a female meleagris to me.

Please confirm and I apologize I also posted this on the wrasse lovers thread and came across this one after.



Edit: I called back and they put me through to another expert and he agreed these are meleagris.
 
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And all juvi's are inherently female.
 
Thanks, I was worried that maybe Petco employees had already started working at LA when I got their first response.
 
I think I agree it is probably Halichoeres poeyi, I am having a hard time finding anything about them in the hobby and I am seeing a wide variety of images for the adult. Does anyone know anything about them? Temperament? Value? I have never seen 1 for sale.
any help would be awesome.
 
I think I agree it is probably Halichoeres poeyi, I am having a hard time finding anything about them in the hobby and I am seeing a wide variety of images for the adult. Does anyone know anything about them? Temperament? Value? I have never seen 1 for sale.
any help would be awesome.

I have never seen one listed for sale, but they are a shallow water dweller and are found in seagrass and algae beds, so catching them likely isnt difficult, so they should be reasonably priced, likely in the $25 to $50 range depending on size, but that is just a guess.

Care should be similar to H. cyanocephalus or garnoti. Reef safe with corals, may go after CUC. It will be pretty hardy, bury at night, and may jump.
 
That is about what I figured for the basics. So far it seems to get along with everyone including my much larger Chrismas and Melanarus wrasses.
I would guess since I cannot find it in the trade at all that the rarity of it may make the price higher than that.
I am curious to know if it is going to get aggressive and how large they get.
 
Max recorded length is near 8", and typically the Halichoeres around that size are a bit more aggressive than the smaller Halichoeres species. I'd expect him to have a decently mild attitude, but won't be one to be at all submissive.
 
Max recorded length is near 8", and typically the Halichoeres around that size are a bit more aggressive than the smaller Halichoeres species. I'd expect him to have a decently mild attitude, but won't be one to be at all submissive.

I would be pretty happy with that!
 
wrasse id

can someone let me know if this is a female esquisite wrasse, someone gave it to me and he thought it was a female esquisite wrasse. thanks for any help.
 

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It's a female, but it's not exquisitus.

There's two possibilities, but I need a better photo to be certain. It's either C. lubbocki or C. rubripinnis, but I tend to think it's the latter.
 
With those, female lubbocki now seems quite likely.
 
I just got this one and was labeled as a "Fairy" not 2 sure, could you help plz??

1219141452b_zps4hfrlapb.jpg
 
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