The Wrasse Lover's Thread!

I have a question about the Melanurus Wrasse pictured below. A few days after I got it, it started having skin peel from its mouth. It has never had a problem eating but the problem has progressively worsened. There is now two fully exposed "teeth" and it struggles to eat anything that is not extra small. Did it bang its mouth and injure itself, is it a disease know to wrasses, will it heal over time? Any help is appreciated. i tried to get a pic that was worth a dang.


 
I have a question about the Melanurus Wrasse pictured below. A few days after I got it, it started having skin peel from its mouth. It has never had a problem eating but the problem has progressively worsened. There is now two fully exposed "teeth" and it struggles to eat anything that is not extra small. Did it bang its mouth and injure itself, is it a disease know to wrasses, will it heal over time? Any help is appreciated. i tried to get a pic that was worth a ****.


He damaged his jaw. It most frequently occurs during transport, it will try to bury while in the bag, but is unable, so it's jaw gets damaged. Many fish can live long and full lives with a damaged jaw in captivity.
 
My wrasses
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Got a blue star lepoard wrasse I've had about 2 months. He's about 3/4 changed to male coloration. It almost looks like he's molting if that makes sense. How long does it typically take to complete the transformation? There are 2 females in the 180 gallon as well if that matters.
 
Got a blue star lepoard wrasse I've had about 2 months. He's about 3/4 changed to male coloration. It almost looks like he's molting if that makes sense. How long does it typically take to complete the transformation? There are 2 females in the 180 gallon as well if that matters.
It really varies specimen to specimen with leopards. I have seen some fully transition in a couple of days, others weeks, still, in some cases, it lingers over months. Having two females in the tank should help the process from stalling.
 
I'm keeping three leopard wrasses in my tank. They're all the same genus (Macropharyngodon), but all three are different species (Bipartitus, Geoffroy, and Choati). They're all about the same size, and all female. Will I see any of these transition to male over time, or do they require other members of their own species to induce a change?
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

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  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%
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