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  1. Regenbooglipvis - Wikipedia

  2. Coris julis, Mediterranean rainbow wrasse : fisheries ... - FishBase

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    Coris julis ( Linnaeus, 1758 ), reported from the northeastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean, and Coris atlantica Günther, 1862, reported from the African Atlantic coast, are currently the only two species representing this genus outside the Indo-Pacific ( Randall, 1999; Parenti and Randall, 2018 ).
    Coris julis was originally described from various Mediterranean Sea localities including Genoa, Venice, Rome, and Naples (Italy), Marseille (France) and Crete (see Fricke et al., 2021 ). Due to the large variability in the coloration of this species, during the first half of XIX century the two liveries were described as different species.
    Coris julis has a complicated synonymy; as we now find that two closely related species co-occur in the western Mediterranean, this synonymy needs to be clarified before the two species can be properly named. Therefore, we here discuss the names in this species complex in detail.
    Five syntypes are known (NRM 3), which probably originated from the Mediterranean Sea, and refer to the primary livery of Coris julis. Subsequent authors, including Bauchot and Quignard (1973: 431), treated the name as a junior synonym of Coris julis ( Linnaeus, 1758 ).
  4. Coris julis - Mediterranean rainbow wrasse | Reef Life Survey

  5. Coris julis (Mediterranean rainbow wrasse) - Reef App

    WEBRainbow Wrasses (Coris) grow to a large size and their appearance changes markedly from juvenile to adult. They dig themselves into the substrate of the tank to sleep or when threatened, so it is necessary to …

  6. Rainbow Wrasse Fish Care Guide (Coris Julis) - Fish Laboratory

  7. Mediterranean rainbow wrasse (Coris julis) · iNaturalist

  8. Coris julis - europa.eu

  9. Coris julis - Monaco Nature Encyclopedia

  10. Frontiers | Genetic and Morphological Evidence to Split …

    WEBCoris julis (Linnaeus, 1758), reported from the northeastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean, and Coris atlantica Günther, 1862, reported from the African Atlantic coast, are currently the only two species representing this genus …

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