
Appearance
The humphead wrasse is the largest living member of the family Labridae, with males reaching 6 ft in length, while females rarely exceed about 3 ft . It has thick, fleshy lips, and a hump forms on its head above the eyes, becoming more prominent as the fish ages, hence its name. Males range from a bright electric blue to pale green, a purplish blue, or a relatively dull blue/green. Juveniles and females are red-orange above, and red-orange to white below. Some males grow very large, with one unconfirmed report of a humphead wrasse that was 7.75 ft long and weighed 420 lbs .
Status
The humphead wrasse is long-lived, but has a very slow breeding rate. Its numbers have declined due to a number of threats, including:# Intensive and species-specific removal in the live reef food fish trade throughout its core range in South-East Asia
# Spearfishing at night with SCUBA gear
# Destructive fishing techniques, including sodium cyanide and dynamite
# Habitat loss and degradation
# Juveniles being taken from the wild and raised or “cultured” in floating net cages until saleable size
# A developing export market for juvenile humphead wrasse for the marine aquarium trade
# Lack of coordinated, consistent national and regional management
# Illegal, unregulated, or unreported fisheries
The fish is listed on the IUCN Red list as Endangered and on Appendix II of CITES.
The species has historically been fished commercially in northern Australia, but has been protected in Queensland since 2003 and Western Australia since 1998.
In Guangdong Province, southern mainland China, permits are required for the sale of this species; Indonesia allows fishing only for research, mariculture, and licensed artisanal fishing; the Maldives instituted an export ban in 1995; Papua New Guinea prohibits export of fish over 2 ft total length; and Niue has banned all fishing for this species.
The humphead wrasse is a U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service . Species of Concern are those species about which the , has some concerns regarding status and threats, but for which insufficient information is available to indicate a need to list the species under the .

Habitat
Adults are commonly found on steep coral reef slopes, channel slopes, and lagoon reefs in water 3 to 330 ft deep.They are very opportunistic predators, preying primarily on crustaceans, mollusks , fish, and echinoderms. They are one of the few predators of toxic animals such as the sea hare ''Aplysia'' and Napolian Junior Ostraciidae and have even been reported preying on crown-of-thorns starfish. This species actively selects branching hard and soft corals and seagrasses at settlement. Juveniles tend to prefer a more cryptic existence in areas of dense branching corals, bushy macroalgae, or seagrasses, while larger individuals and adults prefer to occupy limited home ranges in more open habitat on the edges of reefs, channels, and reef passes. The species is most often observed in solitary male-female pairs, or groups of two to seven individuals.
Reproduction
Individuals become sexually mature at four to six years, and females are known to live for around 50 years, whereas males live a slightly shorter 45 years. Humphead wrasses are protogynous hermaphrodites, with some members of the population becoming male at about 9 years old The factors that control the timing of sex change are not yet known. Adults move to the down-current end of the reef and form local spawning aggregations at certain times of the year.References:
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