Thalassoma bifasciatum

Thalassoma bifasciatum

Taxobox


image_width = 240px
regnum = Animalia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Actinopterygii
ordo = Perciformes
familia = Labridae
genus = "Thalassoma"
species = "T. bifasciatum"
binomial = "Thalassoma bifasciatum"
binomial_authority = Bloch, 1791

"Thalassoma bifasciatum" is a is a species of saltwater fish in the wrasse family (family Labridae) of order Perciformes native to the coral reefs of the Caribbean Sea. Like its relative "T. amblycephalum" it is commonly called "blue-headed wrasse", "blunt-headed wrasse" or "bluehead". Blueheads are small (less than 110 mm standard length) and rarely live longer than 2 years. They form large schools over the reef and feed primarily on planktonic copepods as well as small benthic crustaceans.

Like many other wrasse species, the bluehead is a protogynous sequential hermaphrodite: individuals may begin life either as males or females, but females can change sex later in life and function as males. Young/small females and males are yellow and white in color, often with black lateral stripes and occasionally dark vertical bars. This coloration is known as the Initial Phase. These individuals can rapidly alter the presence or intensity of their yellow color, stripes, and bars, and these color changes appear to correspond to behavioral changes. Large females and some males can permanently change coloration and/or sex and enter the Terminal Phase coloration, which has a blue head, black and white bars behind the head, and a green body. It is this color phase that gives the species its name.

References

*
*
* Munday, P.L., P.M. Buston, and R.R. Warner, Diversity and flexibility of sex-change strategies in animals. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 2006. 21(1): p. 89-95.
* Warner, R.R., Large mating aggregation and daily long-distance spawning migrations in the bluehead wrasse, "Thalassoma bifasciatum." Environmental Biology of Fishes, 1995. 44: p. 337-345.
* Warner, R.R. and L.M. Dill, Courtship displays and coloration as indicators of safety rather than of male quality: the safety assurance hypothesis. Behavioral Ecology, 2000. 11(4): p. 444-451.
* Warner, R.R. and Robertson, D.R. 1978. Sexual patterns of the labroid fishes of the western Caribbean: 1. The wrasses (Labridae). Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology, 254, 1–27.


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