82 photos - 36 species
Introduction
There are 65 genera and 500 species,
making it the second largest species in the fish family.
They are lively swimmers, always on the move.
The size varies from 6 cm to 2.30 metres.
Bodianus anthioides
Lyretail hogfish or Lyretail pigfish
Maximum length: 21 cm
Depth: 3 - 60 m
Anterior body brown, posterior body white with brown spots
and forked tail with 2 brown stripes.
Adults often live in bays, lagoons and on outer reefs,
while juveniles live around black corals and gorgonians.
Mullets are frequent companions.
Photos 1 - 2 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Bodianus axillaris
Axilspot hogfish, Coral pigfish or Turncoat hogfish
Maximum length: 20 cm
Depth: 2 - 40 m
Solitary in coral-rich reefs.
Photos 1 - 3 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Bodianus diana
Diana's hogfish
Maximum length: 25 cm
Depth: 3 - 50 m
Brown body with 4 - 5 white dorsal spots.
Often found on coral-rich, steep slopes.
Photo 1 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Bodianus mesothorax
Split-level hogfish, Blackbelt hogfish, Black-belt hogfish,
Coral hogfish, Eclipse hogfish, Eclipse pigfish, Mesothorax hogfish
or Yellow-spotted hogfish
Maximum length: 20 cm
Depth: 5 - 30 m
Black band on the front body.
Prefers coral-rich outer reef slopes.
Photos 1 - 2 Johnny: Moalboal Philippines
Bodianus rufus
Spanish hogfish
Maximum length: 60 cm
Depth: 3 - 35 m
Upper part of the body is purple at the front, belly and tail are golden yellow.
Swims continuously around the reef.
Not shy, allows a close approach.
Photos 1 + 3 + 4 Johnny: Bonaire Caribbean
Photo 2 Astrid: Bonaire Caribbean
Cheilinus abudjubbe
Abudjubbe wrasse
Maximum length: 40 cm
Depth: 2 - 30 m
Lives in coral-rich areas with rubble, sand and algae.
Solitary and very vigilant.
Photos 1 - 2 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Cheilinus chlorourus
Floral wrasse
Maximum length: 36 cm
Depth: 2 - 30 m
Very variable colouration, can vary from green with red areas
to light grey-brownish, usually with small white dots
arranged in longitudinal rows and white spots on the back.
Photo 1 Johnny: Bangka Island North Sulawesi
Photo 2 Johnny: Lembeh Strait North Sulawesi
Cheilinus fasciatus
Red-breasted wrasse
Maximum length: 36 cm
Depth: 5 - 40 m
Not very shy.
It resembles a grouper in its bulky shape.
The basic colour is whitish with grey, vertical bands.
Large adult specimens have bright red zones on the chest, behind the gill covers and on the fins.
Inhabits lagoons, bays and outer reefs.
Photo 1 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Photo 2 Astrid: Hurghada Egypt
Cheilinus lunulatus
Broomtail wrasse
Maximum length: 50 cm
Depth: 0.5 - 30 m
It has a green body, a blue "broom tail", a yellow pectoral fin and a yellow spot on the gill cover.
It likes to swim alone along reef edges with deep caves and patches of sand or rubble.
Vigilant.
Photos 1 - 2 Female Johnny: El Qesir Egypt
Photo 3 Male Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Photo 4 Male Astrid: Hurghada Egypt
Cheilinus trilobatus
Tripletail wrasse
Maximum length: 35 cm
Depth: 1 - 30 metres
A large and fairly common wrasse.
In areas where divers and snorkellers are more frequent, this rather solitary species is not very shy.
Photo 1 Johnny: Embudu Maldives
Cheilinus undulatus
Humphead wrasse, Maori wrasse, Napoleon wrasse or Napoleon fish
Maximum length: 2.30 m
Depth: 1 - 60 m
Adults with strong frontal hump, juveniles with two black eye stripes.
Shy.
Populations in sharp decline in the Indo-Pacific
due to unscrupulous cyanide fishing for Southeast Asian restaurants with live fish.
Photos 1 - 2 Astrid: Big + Little Brother Egypt
Photos 3 - 4 Johnny: Embudu Maldives
Cheilio inermis
Cigar wrasse
Maximum length: 50 cm
Depth: 1 - 35 m
Colour Variable from green, brown to yellow.
Shy loner.
Accompanies mullets and other wrasses and waits for prey to be exposed.
Photo 1 Johnny: Moalboal Philippines
Photo 2 Johnny: Lembeh Strait North Sulawesi
Photos 3 - 5 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Cymolutes torquatus
Finescale razorfish, Razor wrasse or Collared knifefish
Maximum length: 20 cm
Depth: 3 - 25 m
Solitary, mostly found on sandy bottoms and shallow lagoons.
Photo 1 Johnny: Bangka Island North Sulawesi
Cirrhilabrus lubbocki
Lubbock's wrasse
Maximum length: 8 cm
Depth: 3 - 35 m
Yellow pectoral fin.
Over corals and rubble on outer reefs.
Travelling singly or in loose groups, snapping at zooplankton.
Photo 1 Johnny: Moalboal Philippines
Clepticus parrae
Creole wrasse
Maximum length: 30 cm
Depth: 10 - 25 metres
Older fish develop a yellow to reddish area in the lower part of the hind body.
The juvenile form has a longitudinal row of spots
on the back consisting of light and dark dots.
The initial phase is dark purple to lavender in colour.
Forms schools along the reef.
Not shy, ignores divers.
Photos 1 - 3 Johnny: Bonaire Caribbean
Epibulus insidiator
Sling-jaw wrasse
Maximum length: 35 cm
Depth: 1 - 30 m
Lives in coral-rich lagoons.
Eats small shrimps, crabs and fish living in corals,
which it sucks in at lightning speed with its mouth.
Inverted mouth extended in photo 4
Photos 1 - 4 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Gomphosus caeruleus
Green birdmouth wrasse
Maximum length: 28 cm
Depth. 1 - 30 m
Females yellow with white lower body, upper body blue-black.
Males completely blue.
They have a long snout and live in lagoons, bays and outer reefs,
with the males travelling alone and the females in small harem groups.
They use their long snout to get invertebrates out of cracks.
Photos 1 - 3 Johnny: El Qesir Egypt
Photo 4 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Halichoeres leucurus
Reyhead wrasse, Chainline wrasse, Sand-reef wrasse or Silty wrasse
Maximum length: 13 cm
Depth: 5 - 20 m
Favour sandy areas, burrow into them to sleep.
Always swimming, very difficult to photograph.
Photos 1 - 2 Johnny: Moalboal Philippines
Hemigymnus fasciatus
Barred Thicklip wrasse
Maximum length: 50 cm
Depth: 2 - 30 metres
In comparison to other Junker Wrasses, they have a bulky, high-backed body and a large head.
They are unmistakably black and white in colour, with a pattern of vertical stripes.
They generally live as solitary animals, mostly on rocks or rubble at the edge of coral reefs.
Photo 1 Astrid: Moalboal Philippines
Hemigymnus melapterus
Blackeye thicklip wrasse or Half-and-half wrasse
Maximum length: 50 cm
Depth: 1 - 30 m
Adults are olive green.
Shy loners.
Juveniles between corals and rubble.
Eats invertebrates, especially hard shellfish, excreting the remains as a * sand cloud *.
Photo 1 ( Adult ) Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Photos 2 - 3 ( juvenile ) Johnny: El Quesir Egypt
Hemigymnus sexfasciatus
Red sea thicklip wrasse
Maximum length: 50 cm
Depth: 1 - 20 m
White body with 5 broad and dark transverse bands.
Rarely encountered and shy loner.
Ingests sand to filter out invertebrates.
Photo 1 ( juvenile ) Astrid: Hurghada Egypt
Photos 2 - 3 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Hologymnosus annulatus
Ring wrasse or Ringed slender wrasse
Maximum length: 40 cm
Depth: 5 - 35 m
Photos 2 - 3 show juveniles.
Always near the bottom, mimicking young bluehead tilefish.
Adult males are green with blue stripes, while females are brown with dark stripes.
Photos 1 - 3 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Iniistius pavo
Peacock wrasse or Blue razorfish
Maximum length: 40 cm adult.
Depth: 2 - 100 m
Juvenile: They imitate dead leaves with drifting and rocking swimming behaviour.
Found at shallow depths.
Mostly below 20 m, singly or in loose groups.
Eats crustaceans and shell snails, very shy, dives into sand at lightning speed.
Photo 1 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Photos 2 - 3 Johnny: Lembeh Strait North Sulawesi
Labroides bicolor
Bicolor cleanerfish, Bicolor(ed) cleaner wrasse, Cleaner wrasse,
Two-color cleaner wrasse or Yellow diesel
Maximum length: 14 cm
Depth: 1 - 40 m
Has cleaning stations in various habitats.
Photo 1 Johnny: Embudu Maldives
Labroides dimidiatus
Bluestreak cleaner wrasse
Maximum length: 12 cm
Depth: 1 - 40 m
Occupies cleaning stations on conspicuous coral formations.
Eats parasites, mucus and skin remnants when cleaning other fish.
Photos 1 - 3 Johnny: El Qesir Egypt
Larabicus quadrilineatus
Four-line wrasse
Maximum length: 11 cm
Depth: 0.5 - 22 m
On the photo is a juvenile, only these are cleaner fish until they are adults, after that no more.
They do not have a permanent home.
When they are adults, they feed on coral polyps.
Photo 1 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Macropharyngodon ornatus
False leopard or Ornate leopard wrasse
Maximum length: 12 cm
Depth: 3 - 30 m
Juvenile: Head with a white base colour and net-like orange stripes.
Single or in small groups over coral, sand or rubble.
Photo 1 Johnny: Bangka Island North - Sulawesi
Photo 2 Johnny: Moalboal Philippines
Novaculichthys taeniourus
Rockmover wrasse, Carpet wrasse, Gragon wrasse, Bar-cheeked wrasse, Olive-Scribbled wrasse or Reindeer wrasse
Maximum length: 30 cm
Depth: 2 - 45 m
In the first 2 pictures you can see the juvenile form of this fish.
They are brown with light speckles and imitate the colouring and swimming style of drifting tangs.
Adults can usually be seen individually near the reef, turning over rubble in search of food.
Photos 1 - 3 Johnny: Lembeh Strait North Sulawesi
Oxycheilinus digramma
Check-lined wrasse
Maximum length: 35 cm
Depth: 2 - 60 m
Their colour varies, either green with a reddish belly or light with a red longitudinal stripe.
Hunts small fish.
Swims over the bottom.
Curious.
Photo 1 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Oxycheilinus arenatus
Speckled maori wrasse
Maximum length: 24 cm
Depth: 1 - 25 m
White spot on the root of the tail and a brown lateral stripe.
Solitary, always swimming close to the bottom.
Curious and not very shy.
Photo 1 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Oxycheilinus bimaculatus
Two-spot wrasse
Maximum length: 15 cm
Depth: 1 - 18 m
Their colouring is very variable, from brown to yellow or green, with various other shades or spots.
Males develop long filaments on the caudal fin, reminiscent of a diamond.
Photos 1 - 2 Johnny: Bangka Island North Sulawesi
Paracheilinus octotaenia
Red sea eightline flasher
Maximum length: 9 cm
Depth: 5 - 30 metres
The male in the photo is in the process of mating, as his fins are raised.
They form harem groups of up to 12 females and several males.
Hunts for zooplankton in open water.
Photos 1 - 2 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Pseudocheilinus hexataenia
Six-line wrasse
Maximum length: 8 cm
Depth: 2 - 35 m
Very difficult to photograph because it moves very quickly
and is always close to its hiding place.
The body is purple-red with yellow lines and a red eye with 2 lines.
Photos 1 - 2 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Pseudodax moluccanus
Chiseltooth wrasse
Maximum length: 25 cm
Depth: 2 - 40 m
Strong, chisel-like teeth that are perfect for cracking
and eating hard-shelled invertebrates.
It is a fast swimmer and always close to hiding places.
Photos 1 - 2 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt
Pteragogus enneacanthus
Cockerel wrasse
Maximum length: 12 cm
Depth: 3 - 30 m
Found over rocky and sandy areas, as well as corals.
Solitary and shy, they are rarely seen.
Photo 1 Johnny: Lembeh Strait North Sulawesi
Pteragogus cryptus
Cryptic wrasse
Maximum length: 9.5 cm
Depth: 1 - 20 m
Lives alone or in pairs, hidden, often overlooked.
Usually in the cover of soft corals, coral branches, sea grass or algae.
Photo 1 Johnny: Hurghada Egypt