Anzeige
Fauna Marin GmbH aquarioom.com Fauna Marin GmbH Kölle Zoo Aquaristik Aqua Medic

Coris melanura Blacktail Rainbow Wrasse, Rainbow wrasse

Coris melanura is commonly referred to as Blacktail Rainbow Wrasse, Rainbow wrasse. Difficulty in the aquarium: There are no reports available yet that this animal has already been kept in captivity successfully. A aquarium size of at least 1500 Liter is recommended. Toxicity: Toxic hazard unknown.


Profilbild Urheber Dennis Rabeling, Lanzarote, Kanarischen Inseln

Foto: Las Palmas, Kanarischen Inseln


Courtesy of the author Dennis Rabeling, Lanzarote, Kanarischen Inseln . Please visit www.inaturalist.org for more information.

Uploaded by AndiV.

Image detail


Profile

lexID:
16969 
AphiaID:
1780383 
Scientific:
Coris melanura 
German:
Schwarzschwanz- Regenbogenlippfisch 
English:
Blacktail Rainbow Wrasse, Rainbow Wrasse 
Category:
Läppfiskar 
Family tree:
Animalia (Kingdom) > Chordata (Phylum) > Teleostei (Class) > Eupercaria incertae sedis (Order) > Labridae (Family) > Coris (Genus) > melanura (Species) 
Initial determination:
(Lowe, ), 1839 
Occurrence:
Straße von Gibraltar, Alborán Sea (Mediterranean Sea), Azores, Balearic Islands, Madeira, Northeast Atlantic, the Canary Islands 
Marine Zone:
Subtidal, sublittoral, infralittoral, deep zone of the oceans from the lower limit of the intertidal zone (intertidal) to the shelf edge at about 200 m water depth. neritic. 
Sea depth:
3 - 160 Meter 
Size:
18,4 cm 
Temperature:
13,1 °F - 80.6 °F (13,1°C - 27°C) 
Food:
Amphipods, Copepods, Crustaceans, Fish larvae, Invertebrates, Mysis, Small Sharks, Zooplankton 
Tank:
329.97 gal (~ 1500L)  
Difficulty:
There are no reports available yet that this animal has already been kept in captivity successfully 
Offspring:
Not available as offspring 
Toxicity:
Toxic hazard unknown 
CITES:
Not evaluated 
Red List:
Not evaluated (NE) 
Related species at
Catalog of Life
:
 
More related species
in this lexicon
:
 
Author:
Publisher:
Meerwasser-Lexikon.de
Created:
Last edit:
2024-11-22 13:24:51 

Info

The genus Coris includes 28 valid species, most of which are distributed in the Indo-Pacific region, with only two species known from the eastern Atlantic: Coris atlantica and Coris julis.
Coris julis exhibits a great variability in coloration and is divided into Atlantic and Mediterranean populations.

Two colorations have been described for Coris julis: the primary coloration or “giofredi”, which corresponds to females and first-stage males and is considered to be the same for Atlantic and Mediterranean populations; and the secondary coloration or “julis”, which corresponds to second-stage males and is different for Atlantic and Mediterranean populations.

Coris melanura lives sympatrically with Coris julis in the Mediterranean, both species coexist but partly use different depth zones:
Coris julis: 0.2 . 120 meters
Coris melanura 3 m- 160 meters
that both species meet is more than likely.
Due to the publication “Genetic and Morphological Evidence to Split the Coris julis Species Complex (Teleostei: Labridae) Into Two Sibling Species: Resurrection of Coris melanura (Lowe, 1839) Redescription of Coris julis (Linnaeus, 1758)”, Coris melanura was reactivated as a valid species in WoRMS in 2024.

Primary coloration of Coris melanura
females and males in the initial phase have a thin black line that extends across the upper half of the body from behind the eye socket to almost halfway down the tail fin rays, a small triangular dark spot on the membrane between the second and third dorsal spine (sometimes barely visible) and 6-8 elongated rows of small red spots surrounding the white belly from the lower edge of the pectoral fin insertion to the anus;
Secondary coloration (males in the secondary phase) with black caudal fin and a row of black, yellow or red (sometimes two of these colors present), vertically elongated spots (bars) along the side of the body.

Color variability:
Around the Canary Islands, Coris atlantica Günther 1862, Coris julis and Coris melanura occur.
In addition to the well-known sex change from female to male, development-related color changes, the division into primary and secondary males, and spontaneous lightning-fast color changes due to different environments, a purely “optical assignment” is hardly possible.
Furthermore, hybridization among the three mentioned wrasse species around the Cape Verde Islands cannot be ruled out.

Synonyms:
Coris taeniatus Steindachner, 1863 · unaccepted
Julis azorensis Fowler, 1919 · unaccepted
Julis festiva Valenciennes, 1839 · unaccepted
Julis melanura Lowe, 1839 · unaccepted > superseded combination

Pictures

Juvenile


Female

Copyright Carlos Luis Hernández-González, Foto Kanarische Inseln
1

Terminal phase

Copyright Carlos Luis Hernández-González, Foto Kanarische Inseln
1

Commonly


Husbandry know-how of owners

0 husbandary tips from our users available
Show all and discuss