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- Q1727953 subject Q1970530.
- Q1727953 subject Q4919544.
- Q1727953 subject Q6178063.
- Q1727953 subject Q6422971.
- Q1727953 subject Q7150551.
- Q1727953 subject Q8302799.
- Q1727953 subject Q8579678.
- Q1727953 abstract "Cleaner fish are fish that provide a service to other fish species by removing dead skin and ectoparasites. This cleaning symbiosis is an example of mutualism, an ecological interaction that benefits both parties involved. However, the cleaner fish may sometimes cheat and consume mucus or tissue, thus creating a form of parasitism. A wide variety of fishes including wrasse, cichlids, catfish, pipefish, and gobies display cleaning behaviors. Similar behavior is found in other groups of animals, such as cleaner shrimps.Cleaner fish advertise their services with conspicuous coloration, often displaying a brilliant blue stripe that spans the length of the body. This adaptation has evolved independently in different species of cleaner fish, making it an example of convergent evolution. Other species of fish, called mimics, imitate the behavior and phenotype of cleaner fish to gain access to client fish tissue. This is another example of convergent evolution.".
- Q1727953 thumbnail Epinephelus_tukula_is_cleaned_by_two_Labroides_dimidiatus.jpg?width=300.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q105533.
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- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q1519619.
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- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q1970530.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q2000165.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q200312.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q208722.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q2604765.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q2719610.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q3002557.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q3242894.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q3406.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q429787.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q4468.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q4692283.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q4919544.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q5130575.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q578718.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q59576.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q616914.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q6178063.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q6422971.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q675781.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q7150551.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q771405.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q8302799.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q8579678.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q861782.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q907109.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q908440.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q97.
- Q1727953 wikiPageWikiLink Q98.
- Q1727953 comment "Cleaner fish are fish that provide a service to other fish species by removing dead skin and ectoparasites. This cleaning symbiosis is an example of mutualism, an ecological interaction that benefits both parties involved. However, the cleaner fish may sometimes cheat and consume mucus or tissue, thus creating a form of parasitism. A wide variety of fishes including wrasse, cichlids, catfish, pipefish, and gobies display cleaning behaviors.".
- Q1727953 label "Cleaner fish".
- Q1727953 depiction Epinephelus_tukula_is_cleaned_by_two_Labroides_dimidiatus.jpg.