Cleaner Wrasse Amazing Facts — The Tiny Fish Running a Full-Service Reef Clinic

The cleaner wrasse is one of the most remarkable fish on any coral reef — a tiny, brightly striped fish that runs what can only be described as a medical clinic for other reef fish, providing parasite removal, wound cleaning and general health maintenance services to an extraordinary list of clients many times its own size. And recent research has revealed this small fish may be capable of something scientists thought impossible in a fish — recognising its own reflection. Here are the most amazing cleaner wrasse facts!
🏥 Running a Reef Cleaning Station
The cleaner wrasse, Labroides dimidiatus, establishes and maintains specific locations on coral reefs called cleaning stations — small, recognisable territories where other fish actively seek out the cleaner wrasse's services. Client fish arriving at a cleaning station advertise their willingness to be cleaned through specific postures — spreading fins, opening mouths wide, adopting unusual tilted or head-down orientations — that signal to the cleaner wrasse that they are receptive to being cleaned rather than posing a predatory threat. The cleaner wrasse then picks external parasites, dead tissue, bacteria and food debris from the client's skin, gills, fins and even from inside the open mouth and across the exposed eye surface, providing a genuine health service that benefits both parties.
🤝 A Relationship Built on Trust and Reputation
The relationship between cleaner wrasse and their clients is more complex than simple mutual benefit — it involves genuine reputation management by the cleaner wrasse. Research has shown that cleaner wrasse adjust their service quality depending on whether other potential client fish are watching. When being observed by other fish, cleaner wrasse provide better, more attentive service to current clients — actively managing their reputation to attract more clients. Conversely, cleaner wrasse sometimes cheat — biting chunks of client mucus, which is more nutritious than parasites — when no audience is watching. This audience-dependent behaviour, requiring the cleaner wrasse to track who is watching and adjust behaviour accordingly, is a level of social awareness previously considered beyond fish cognition.
🪞 Passing the Mirror Test
In 2019, a study published in PLOS Biology reported that cleaner wrasse apparently pass the mirror self-recognition test — a standard test of self-awareness in which an animal is marked with a spot visible only in a mirror and observed to see whether it attempts to inspect or remove the mark from its own body. Cleaner wrasse exposed to mirrors with ink marks on their throats consistently attempted to rub the mark against surfaces after seeing their reflection — behaviour not seen in unmarked fish or fish without mirrors. This finding caused significant scientific debate since self-recognition was previously thought to require the large brain structures of mammals and birds — a cleaner wrasse brain is tiny by comparison.
🦈 Cleaning Even the Largest Predators
The cleaner wrasse's client list is extraordinary — it services virtually every fish species on the reef regardless of size, including large predators that would normally eat a small fish without hesitation. Groupers, moray eels, barracudas, Napoleon wrasse, sharks and even manta rays visit cleaning stations and adopt submissive cleaning postures that temporarily suppress their predatory instincts. The cleaner wrasse moves freely across the body surface, into the open gill chambers and even inside the open mouth of these predators without being eaten — a remarkable truce that both parties appear to actively maintain because the health benefits of cleaning genuinely outweigh the benefit of a single small meal for the predator.
🔄 Born Female, Become Male
Cleaner wrasse are sequential hermaphrodites — all individuals are born female, with the dominant individual in each social group eventually transitioning to become male. When the dominant male of a cleaning station disappears or dies, the largest female in the group transitions to become male within days — a remarkably rapid sex change that includes behavioural changes as well as physiological ones. This flexible sex determination system allows cleaning station social groups to always maintain a functional male presence without needing a new individual to arrive from outside the established group.
🌍 Found Across the Indo-Pacific
The bluestreak cleaner wrasse is found across reef environments throughout the Indian Ocean and Pacific Ocean, from the Red Sea and East Africa to Japan, Australia and the central Pacific islands. It is one of the most widespread and ecologically important small fish on Indo-Pacific reefs, with studies showing that reefs from which cleaner wrasse are experimentally removed show measurable increases in parasite loads among other reef fish and reductions in overall fish diversity as clients abandon the area in search of cleaning services elsewhere — demonstrating the genuine ecological importance of this tiny fish to reef ecosystem health.
Self-aware, reputation-managing and running a medical clinic that even sharks queue up to use, the cleaner wrasse is one of the ocean's most astonishing small animals. 🐠

Comments
Thanks David :)
Thanks Sanchu :)
Thanks Suresh Live and let live ..well said