A red morwong (Morwong fuscus) in Swansea, NSW, Australia
by mattdowse
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Russia
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seen from Russia

seen from India
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seen from Latvia
seen from Mauritius
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seen from United States
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seen from Malaysia
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seen from United States
A red morwong (Morwong fuscus) in Swansea, NSW, Australia
by mattdowse
Red Moki footage from our dive on Christmas Day. They're pretty chill fish, and will let divers get very close. I didn't use zoom in any of these shots.
#1963 - Cheilodactylus spectabilis - Red Moki
Photo by @purrdence
AKA banded morwong, brown-banded morwong, carp or nanua. It might not be a Cheilodactylus, however - recent genetic and morphological evidence puts it in the genus Chirodactylus, in a different family.
First described in 1872 by Frederick Wollaston Hutton, from the Cook Straits in New Zealand. ‘spectabilis means "notable" or "showy", a reference to the markings.
Found along the coasts of southern Australia, and northern New Zealand, where it lives in caves and crevices, and emerges to feed in the kelp forests. They feed on gastropods, bivalves, crustaceans, polychaetes and other benthic invertebrates such as small sea urchins. The latter may play a role in preventing the creation of urchin barrens. A long lived and slow growing species, living up to 90 years old, growing up to a meter in size.
#1079 - Cheilodactylus gibbosus - Western Crested Morwong
photo and ID by @gemfyre
Another Perciforme, this time in the family Cheilodactylidae. The genus names translates as ‘lip-finger’. This is a juvenile - the crest markings and upraised spine are less pronounced in adults.
Found in the Eastern Indian Ocean and Southeast Pacific, Kermadec Island and Easter Island, apparently, which strikes me as a pretty odd distribution for a shallow-water, sheltered coastline fish.
Woodman Point, Perth