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  2. Cleaner fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleaner_fish

    Cleaner fish are fish that show a specialist feeding strategy by providing a service to other species, referred to as clients, by removing dead skin, ectoparasites, and infected tissue from the surface or gill chambers.

  3. Wrasse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrasse

    Cleaner wrasses are best known for feeding on dead tissue, scales, and ectoparasites, although they are also known to 'cheat', consuming healthy tissue and mucus, which is energetically costly for the client fish to produce.

  4. Cleaning symbiosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleaning_symbiosis

    Cleaning symbiosis is a mutually beneficial association between individuals of two species, where one (the cleaner) removes and eats parasites and other materials from the surface of the other (the client). Cleaning symbiosis is well-known among marine fish, where some small species of cleaner fish, notably wrasses but also species in other ...

  5. Bluestreak cleaner wrasse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluestreak_cleaner_wrasse

    Bluestreak cleaner wrasses clean to consume ectoparasites on client fish for food. The bigger fish recognise them as cleaner fish because they have a lateral stripe along the length of their bodies, [9] and by their movement patterns.

  6. Cleaning station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleaning_station

    A cleaning station is a location where aquatic life congregate to be cleaned by smaller beings. Such stations exist in both freshwater and marine environments, and are used by animals including fish , sea turtles and hippos .

  7. Labroides bicolor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labroides_bicolor

    Labroides bicolor is a species of wrasse endemic to the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean. It is known by various names including bicolor cleanerfish, bicolor (ed) cleaner wrasse, cleaner wrasse, two-color cleaner wrasse and yellow diesel wrasse .

  8. Hawaiian cleaner wrasse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaiian_cleaner_wrasse

    The Hawaiian cleaner wrasse or golden cleaner wrasse (Labroides phthirophagus), is a species of wrasse (genus Labroides) found in the waters surrounding the Hawaiian Islands. The fish is endemic to Hawaii. These cleaner fish inhabit coral reefs, setting up a territory referred to as a cleaning station.

  9. Coral reef fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coral_reef_fish

    Fish can not groom themselves. Some fish specialise as cleaner fish, and establish cleaning stations where other fish can come to have their parasites nibbled away. The "resident fish doctor and dentist on the reef is the bluestreak cleaner wrasse".

  10. Remora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remora

    The remora ( / ˈrɛmərə / ), sometimes called suckerfish or sharksucker, is any of a family ( Echeneidae) of ray-finned fish in the order Carangiformes. [4] Depending on species, they grow to 30–110 cm (12–43 in) long. Their distinctive first dorsal fins take the form of a modified oval, sucker-like organ with slat-like structures that ...

  11. Anisotremus virginicus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anisotremus_virginicus

    The juveniles act as cleaner fish. Systematics. Anisotremus virginicus was first formally described in 1758 as Sparus virginicus by Linnaeus with the type locality given as South America. When the American ichthyologist Theodore Nicholas Gill created the genus Anisotremus he named Sparus virginicus as its type species. Utilisation