“…Naturally occurring hybrids among coral reef fishes were once thought to be rare (Hubbs, 1955), although recent studies have identified over 75 species of coral reef fish that hybridize in the wild (Montanari, Hobbs, Pratchett, & van Herwerden, 2016;Yaakub, Bellwood, Herwerden, & Walsh, 2006) and many more cases of natural hybridization continue to be described (e.g., DiBattista et al, 2016;Gainsford, Van Herwerden, & Jones, 2015;Hobbs, Frisch, Allen, & van Herwerden, 2009;Marie, Van Herwerden, Choat, & Hobbs, 2007;Montanari, van Herwerden, Pratchett, Hobbs, & Fugedi, 2012;Payet et al, 2016). Most of these studies have been conducted in well-known suture zones, where biogeographic regions collide and numerical disparity between parent species can result in accidental hybridization (DiBattista et al, 2015;Richards & Hobbs, 2015).…”