Napoleonfisch
Cheilinus undulatus
Korallenriffe des Indo-Pazifik, Kanaleinfahrten und Steilwände, besonders in 2–60 Meter Tiefe.
Größter Knochenfisch am Riff. Auffällige Fleischlippen und Stirnhöcker bei Adulten. Leuchtend blau-grüne Färbung mit dunklen Gesichtslinien.
Identification
Also called the humphead wrasse, this species is the largest member of the wrasse family. Adult males reach 2.3 meters and develop a pronounced bulbous forehead. The body is a subtle mottled blue-green with fine labyrinthine markings that give each individual a unique "face." They can live for over 30 years.
Distribution & Habitat
Napoleons inhabit coral-rich outer reef slopes and channels from the Red Sea to the central Pacific. They are generally solitary as adults, often patrolling the same stretch of reef for years.
Behavior
Napoleons are protogynous hermaphrodites: all individuals begin life as females, and some later transition to males. They prey on hard-shelled invertebrates — mollusks, crabs, urchins — using their powerful teeth to crack shells. Remarkably, they are among the few fish known to eat toxic crown-of-thorns starfish and boxfish.
Where to See Them
Ras Mohammed in the Red Sea, Tubbataha and Sipadan in the Pacific, and Elphinstone (Egypt) are classic sites. Napoleons are often curious and will approach divers closely. Never feed them — it has made wild populations dangerously habituated at some sites and is illegal in most range states.
Indo-Pazifik: vom Roten Meer bis zum zentralen Pazifik. Häufig am Great Barrier Reef, Malediven, Thailand und Indonesien.
Einzelgänger und territorial. Gegenüber Tauchern neugierig. Frisst Seeigel, Seesterne, Weichtiere und Tintenfische. Protogyn hermaphroditisch.
Tauchtours finden, bei denen Sie diese Art treffen könnten:
Tauchtouren & Aktivitäten
Buchen Sie Taucherlebnisse bei lokalen Anbietern