Clown Coris
Coris aygula
Clown Coris is a reef-associated wrasse from Indo-Pacific tropical waters. Adults are vivid blue-green with orange to red markings, and juveniles look very different, which can make field ID tricky.

Identification points
- Adults show a bright blue-green body with orange to reddish facial and body markings.
- They have the elongated wrasse profile with a pointed snout and continuous dorsal fin.
- Juveniles are much browner and more patterned, often with a distinct dark eye spot near the rear of the dorsal fin.
Habitat
Lives on coral reefs and adjacent rubble or sand slopes in shallow tropical Indo-Pacific waters, often over clear reef flats and outer reef edges.
Bait notes
Rarely targeted as a sport fish. If taken incidentally, small crustacean pieces, shellfish, or tiny soft plastics that imitate reef prey are the most plausible offerings.
Behavior
An active diurnal predator that hunts small benthic invertebrates, especially crustaceans and mollusks, by probing and picking around reef structure.
Caution
Handle carefully because wrasses can be active and spiny reef fish handling near coral can cause cuts. Do not eat without local guidance; reef-fish consumption risks can include ciguatera in some areas.
Fishing notes
Best approached as a reef bycatch species rather than a deliberate target. Light tackle around coral structure may hook one incidentally, but snag risk is high and handling should be minimized.