All Species Animalia

Coris aygula Lacepède, 1801 is a animal in the Labridae family, order Perciformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Coris aygula Lacepède, 1801 (Coris aygula Lacepède, 1801)
Animalia

Coris aygula Lacepède, 1801

Coris aygula Lacepède, 1801

Coris aygula, also called clown coris, is a reef fish with distinct juvenile and adult forms found across the Indo-Pacific.

Identify with AI — Offline
Family
Genus
Coris
Order
Perciformes
Class

About Coris aygula Lacepède, 1801

Scientific Name

Coris aygula Lacepède, 1801

Size

This species can reach a total length of 120 cm (47 in).

Coloration Differences

There is a striking difference in appearance and coloration between juveniles and adult individuals. Juveniles have white and orange coloration, and bear false eyes on the dorsal fin.

Adult Appearance

Adults are uniformly dark green, or may have light banding. Adults also grow a prominent projecting forehead.

Indian Ocean Range

In the Indian Ocean, C. aygula ranges from the Red Sea and the African coast eastward to the Line Islands and Ducie Island in the Pacific Ocean.

Pacific Ocean Range

Its Pacific distribution also extends from southern Japan south to Lord Howe Island.

Habitat Preferences

C. aygula lives on coral reefs, and prefers areas with rubble or sandy bottoms, found at depths between 2 and 30 m (6.6 to 98.4 ft).

Juvenile Habitat

Juveniles of this species are often found in tide pools.

Adult Behavior

Adult individuals are generally solitary.

Ningaloo Reef Feeding

Studies conducted at Ningaloo Reef in Western Australia found that clown coris are important predators of burrowing urchins. These fish feed on the urchins by crushing them with their jaws.

Red Sea Feeding

In the Red Sea, however, clown coris have been observed preying on long-spined Diadema urchins by picking the urchins up and bashing them apart against large rocks, instead of crushing them directly with their jaws.

Photo: (c) François Libert, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC-SA), uploaded by François Libert · cc-by-nc-sa

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Perciformes Labridae Coris

More from Labridae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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