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Thread: School me on the yellow coris wrasse

  1. #1
    Join Date
    05-02-2007
    Location
    Live Oak
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    2,843

    Default School me on the yellow coris wrasse

    I am looking at adding this to my line up. Mainly for the worm eating part but see that it isnt reef safe on any of the sites. As far as inverts I have snails, a couple hermits, emerald carbs, two cleaner shrimp and two fire shrimp. The final picture would be a group of flasher wrasses, a leopard or two and this coris. Any objections and why is it not reef safe?
    Kevin- 375 Gallon Reef

    Reefing made easy...

  2. #2
    Join Date
    08-28-2007
    Location
    Stone Oak PKWY, SA/TX
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    13,593

    Default

    aka canary wrasse

    I had one for over 2 years in my 120g mixed reef setup. I loved it. When threatened it would dart into the sand.

    I always thought mine to be reef safe. I never had any problems with it. It was great at cleaning rocks...especially new rocks.

    Most wrasses will eat the little baby feather dusters...so I never had any of those growing in the main display. In my current setup I do not have a wrasse only because I wanted to see what life would take form....but now that I have hundreds of feather dusters and vermit worms...I'll be thinking of adding a wrasse soon. The coris wrasse is a great addition in my opinion for color, availability and price.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    03-13-2009
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    doesnt matter
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    7,459

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    i have a 4-6 inch one very cool, will nip at my snails only when filpped over but keeps worm pop down, gets along fine with other 9 fish in tank lil bossy sometimes but nothing more than a lil nudge once in a while had mine for over a yr
    REEF MAFIA
    "TEFLON DON"

  4. #4
    Join Date
    04-23-2007
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    749

    Default

    As far as I have read and experienced they are little more reef safe members of the coris wrasse family. They are "flippers" but not at notorious as the dragon and my "flipper" and red coris wrasse.
    - Jarrod -


    "I'm your Huckleberry" - Doc Holliday

  5. #5

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by cowboy572 View Post
    As far as I have read and experienced they are little more reef safe members of the coris wrasse family. They are "flippers" but not at notorious as the dragon and my "flipper" and red coris wrasse.

    i love the red coris wrasse but man did he pick at snails and crabs same for the brown bird wrasse most entertaining fish i have ever had but ate all my crabs and snails

    kyleN gave me his yellow wrasse and he was very peaceful always was doing his own thing but he didnt make it ...


    i hear the green coris is a great coris wrasse

  6. #6
    Join Date
    05-02-2007
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    Live Oak
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    Default

    Well I may have to give one a try sounds like they are fairly safe. I have alot of snail babies and I guess they will become wrasse food but there are tons and tons atm.
    Kevin- 375 Gallon Reef

    Reefing made easy...

  7. #7
    Join Date
    02-12-2004
    Location
    Far West SA 1604 and Culebra
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    4,157

    Default

    This is the white belly wrasse I have (clink on link). Purchased from Texas tropical and marine. It just cruises the tank eating pods and worms.

    People think its a yellow corris wrasse when they see it, but mine is a white belly wrasse aka lemon meringue wrasse which besides its belly look exactly like a corris.

    http://www.melevsreef.com/pics/0404/wrasse.html

    So peeps if you are have one and it has a white belly its not a yellow corris wrasse.

    ~Ray

    Ray Allen
    San Antonio, TX
    1604 Culebra/Shanefield
    rba0284@gmail.com
    40g Breeder Reef Aquarium

  8. #8
    Join Date
    08-28-2007
    Location
    Stone Oak PKWY, SA/TX
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    Yeah, Ray, I have always preferred the Lemon Meringue over the Corris.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    05-02-2007
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    Do you notice yours jumping? I have an open top and have kept mccoskers, leopards and cleaners without jumping. I dont really have a fish that chases them and I believe that is why alot jump. I know its always a chance with wrasses or gobies but would rather have a slim chance if you know what I mean.
    Kevin- 375 Gallon Reef

    Reefing made easy...

  10. #10

    Default

    I am tempted to go with a seagrass wrasse in the new setup.

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