Common Cleanerfish (species: Labroides dimidiatus) in Lizard Island area: all known taxa (Lizard Island Field Guide)
Labroides dimidiatus
Common Cleanerfish


©Andy Lewis: A pair of adult Common Cleanerfish

©Andy Lewis: A pair of Common Cleanerfish attending a Parrotfish (Scarus frenatus)

©Andy Lewis: A juvenile Common Cleanerfish
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Actinopterygii
Order Perciformes
Family Labridae
Genus Labroides
Species Labroides dimidiatus

Colours

              

Distinguishing features

A small elongate fish that swims quickly using the pectoral fins. The juvenile fish are black with a single horizontal blue stripe. The initial and terminal phase fish have a pale head, a thick black stripe running horizontally down the body, and a blue posterior and tail.

Size

  • Up to 11 cm (Standard length)

Depth range

  • Depth range data is not yet available.

Synonyms

Similar taxa

Distribution


©Atlas of Living Australia: Australian distribution

Distribution and habitat preferences

Usually near a prominent coral bommie in areas of hard coral cover.

Can be found in most locations around the island.

Behaviour

The Common Cleanerfish has a specialised diet consisting of the crustacean ectoparasites of other reef fishes, and fish skin mucous. They swim close to the surface of the host fish and pick the parasites off with their specially developed mouthparts. The cleaner wrasse have a distinct display dance to entice other fish to "pose" for cleaning, and evidently this gives them some protection from predators, because the cleaner wrasse can be observed to clean coral trout and spotted rock cod without being eaten. The cleaner wrasse are found in small family groups of 2-6 fish, with the largest being the terminal male. They usually set up a "cleaning station" near a large coral outcrop, and it is common to see many large fishes aggregating there to take advantage of the cleaning service provided by the wrasse. Crustacean ectoparasites are very common on coral reefs, and a typical benthic feeding fish such as the Black eye thicklip may pick up 200-300 gnathid isopods in a single day of feeding, so they need to visit the cleaner wrasse regularly to keep these parasites under control. Larger wrasse are better cleaners than small wrasse, and this is reflected in the cleaning behaviour - host fish tend to approach the larger cleaner wrasse and stay with them for longer, and it is usually the cleaner wrasse which terminates the encounter. The smaller wrasse have to actively chase host fish, and the hosts stay with them for a short time and then move on. Like all wrasses, this species changes sex from female to male as they get older - all juveniles start life as females.

Web resources

References

  • Abreu, M.S., J.P.M. Messias, A.C.V.V. Giacominic and M.C. Soares (2018). Estradiol shapes mutualistic behaviour of female cleaner fish (Labroides dimidiatus - Valenciennes, 1839): Potential implications of environmental disturbance. Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety, 157: 244-248. LIRS catalog number 2241.
  • Arnal, C. (2000). Ecologie comportementale de la symbiose poisson nettoyeur/ poisson client: motivations et honnĂȘtetĂ©, Ph.D. thesis, University of Perpignan, France. LIRS catalog number 637.
  • Arnal, C., O. Verneau and Y. Desdevises (2006). Phylogenetic relationships and ecolution of cleaning behaviour in the family Labridae: importance of body colour pattern, Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 19: 755-763. LIRS catalog number 1178.
  • View all references