Sunset Wrasse
Thalassoma lutescens
The Sunset Wrasse is a bright Indo-Pacific reef wrasse that shifts from a green-and-blue juvenile pattern to a vivid yellow adult with a orange-red belly and blue markings. It is a reef forager rather than a major sport fish, but it is occasionally taken by small hooks around coral and rubble.

Identification points
- Adults are bright yellow to greenish-yellow with a bluish stripe and orange-red underside near the head and belly
- Juveniles are darker green-blue with pale stripes and a more subdued, mottled reef-wrasse look
- Slender wrasse body with a pointed snout and continuous dorsal fin typical of Thalassoma wrasses
Habitat
Shallow coral reefs, reef flats, lagoons, and drop-offs with abundant hard structure and patchy sand; typically in warm tropical marine water.
Bait notes
Best on small natural baits such as shrimp, crab pieces, squid strips, or tiny fish strips; small soft plastics and micro-jigs can also draw strikes, but this species is usually not targeted specifically.
Behavior
Active daytime feeder that picks small crustaceans, mollusks, worms, and other benthic invertebrates from reef surfaces; juveniles often stay closer to cover while adults roam more openly in small loose groups.
Caution
Reef fish consumption can carry ciguatera risk in some tropical areas; do not assume it is safe to eat from all locations. Handle carefully around sharp reef structure to avoid cuts.
Fishing notes
Use light tackle, tiny hooks, and short leader presentations around reef edges, coral heads, and rubble. Keep bait close to structure and retrieve slowly; many captures come incidentally while fishing for other reef species.