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Clown Fish

Pictures of Clown Fish

Clown Fish (1024x768, 1280x800, 1280x960, 1440x900, 1440x1080, 1600x1200, 1680x1050, 1920x1080, 1920x1200, 1920x1440, 2048x1536, 2560x1600) Clown Fish (1024x768, 1152x864, 1280x960, 1440x1080, 1600x1200)
Author: katrin
Clown Fish (1024x768)
Clown Fish (1024x768) Clown Fish (1024x768)

Information about Clown Fish

Clownfish and anemonefish are fishes from the subfamily Amphiprioninae in the family Pomacentridae. About twenty eight species are recognized, one in the genus Premnas, while the remaining are in the genus Amphiprion. In the wild they all form symbiotic mutualisms with sea anemones. Depending on species, Clownfish are overall yellow, orange, reddish, or blackish, and many show white bars or patches. The largest reach a length of 18 cm (7 in), while the smallest barely reach 10 cm (4 in).

Description

Clownfish are native to warmer waters of the Indian and Pacific oceans, including the Great Barrier Reef and the Red Sea. While most species have restricted distributions, others are widespread. They are generally highly host specific, and especially the genera Heteractis and Stichodactyla, and the species Entacmaea quadricolor are frequent partners. The Clownfish feeds on undigested matter which otherwise potentially could harm the sea anemone, and the faecal matter from the Clownfish provides nutrients to the sea anemone. It has also been suggested that the activity of the Clownfish results in greater water circulation around the sea anemone. In addition to providing food for the Clownfish, the sea anemone also provides safety due to its poison.

Clownfish and certain damselfish are the only species of fishes that can avoid the potent poison of a sea anemone. There are several theories about how this is accomplished:

The mucus coating of the fish may be based on sugars rather than proteins. This would mean that anemones fail to recognize the fish as a potential food source and do not fire their nematocysts, or sting organelles.
The coevolution of certain species of Clownfish with specific anemone host species and may have acquired an immunity to the nematocysts and toxins of their host anemone. Experimentation has shown that Amphiprion percula may develop resistance to the toxin from Heteractis magnifica, but it is not totally protected, since it was shown experimentally to die when its skin, devoid of mucus, was exposed to the nematocysts of its host.
A pair of pink anemonefish (Amphiprion perideraion) in their anemone home.Clownfish live in small groups inhabiting a single anemone. The group consists of a breeding pair, which cohabit with a few non-reproductive, "pre-pubescent", and smaller male clownfish. When the female dies, the dominant male changes sex and becomes the female. This life history strategy is known as sequential hermaphroditism. Because Clownfish are all born as males, they are protandrous hermaphrodites (pro=first; androus=male). This is in contrast with another form of hermaphroditism, known as protogyny, in which all fish are born as females but can change to males later.

Clownfish lay eggs on any flat surface close to their host anemones. In the wild, Clownfish spawn around the time of the full moon and the male parent guards them until they hatch about 6 to 10 days later, typically 2 hours after dusk. Clownfish are omnivorous: in the wild they eat live food such as algae, plankton, molluscs, and crustacea; in captivity they can survive on live food, fish flakes, and fish pellets. They feed mostly on copepods and mysids, and undigested food from their host anemones.

Depending on the species, Clownfish can lay hundreds or thousands of eggs. Clownfish were the first type of marine ornamental fish to be successfully bred in captivity on a large scale. It is one of a handful of marine ornamentals whose complete life cycle has been successfully completed in captivity. Members of some Clownfish species, such as the maroon Clownfish, become aggressive in captivity; others, like the false percula Clownfish, can be kept successfully with other individuals of the same species.

Subspecies

Amphiprion akallopisos – Skunk Clownfish
Amphiprion akindynos – Barrier Reef Anemonefish
Amphiprion allardi – Twobar anemonefish
Amphiprion bicinctus – Twoband anemonefish
Amphiprion chagosensis – Chagos anemonefish
Amphiprion chrysogaster – Mauritian anemonefish
Amphiprion chrysopterus – Orange-fin anemonefish
Amphiprion clarkii – Yellowtail Clownfish
Amphiprion ephippium – Saddle anemonefish
Amphiprion frenatus – Tomato Clownfish
Amphiprion fuscocaudatus – Seychelles anemonefish
Amphiprion latezonatus – Wide-band Anemonefish
Amphiprion latifasciatus – Madagascar anemonefish
Amphiprion leucokranos – Whitebonnet anemonefish
Amphiprion mccullochi – Whitesnout anemonefish
Amphiprion melanopus – Fire Clownfish
Amphiprion nigripes – Maldive anemonefish
Amphiprion ocellaris – Clown anemonefish
Amphiprion omanensis – Oman anemonefish
Amphiprion percula – Orange Clownfish
Amphiprion perideraion – Pink skunk Clownfish
Amphiprion polymnus – Saddleback Clownfish
Amphiprion rubacinctus – Red Anemonefish
Amphiprion sandaracinos – Yellow Clownfish
Amphiprion sebae – Sebae anemonefish
Amphiprion thiellei – Thielle's anemonefish
Amphiprion tricinctus – Three-band anemonefish
Premnas biaculeatus – Maroon clownfish

In the aquarium

Clownfish are a popular fish for reef aquariums of 20 gallons or more. Clownfish are now tank-bred to lower the number taken from the wild. Wild-caught tropical fish are more likely to die within a week of purchase, due to catching methods like dynamite fishing and nets with "rockhoppers." Compared to wild-caught Clownfish, tank-bred Clownfish are more disease resistant and also less affected by stress when introduced to the aquarium.

When a sea anemone is not available in an aquarium, they may settle in some varieties of soft corals, or large polyp stony corals. If the fish settles in a coral, it could agitate the fish's skin, and, in some cases, may kill the coral. Once an anemone or coral has been adopted, the Clownfish will defend it. As there is less pressure to forage for food in an aquarium, it is common for Clownfish to remain within 2-4 inches of their host for an entire lifetime.

Clownfish that are far removed from their parents through captive breeding may not have the same instinctual behavior to live in an anemone. They may have to be coaxed into finding the anemone by the home aquarist. Even then, there is no guarantee that the anemone will host the clownfish.

In popular culture

The 2003 (9 years ago) Disney-film Finding Nemo (6 walls) depicts the adventures of an Ocellaris clownfish.

Source: en.wikipedia.org


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