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Pez Payaso Común
Photo: Wikimedia Commons · CC License
Fish IUCN · LC · Least Concern Pomacentridae

Pez Payaso Común

Amphiprion ocellaris

Arrecifes de coral poco profundos del Indo-Pacífico tropical, viviendo en simbiosis con anémonas de mar.

Identificación bajo el agua

Naranja brillante con tres franjas blancas bordeadas de negro. Aletas redondeadas. Vive exclusivamente entre los tentáculos de anémonas del género Heteractis y Stichodactyla.

Identification

The common clownfish — made globally famous by Finding Nemo — is the classic orange-and-white anemonefish of the Indo-Pacific. It is distinguished from the closely related Amphiprion percula by a thinner black edge on its white bars and finer black margins on the fins. Adults reach about 11 cm.

Distribution & Habitat

Native to the eastern Indian Ocean and western Pacific, from the Andaman Sea through Indonesia, the Philippines, and to northwestern Australia. Absent from Hawaii, the Red Sea, and the Atlantic — any "clownfish" seen in those regions is either a different species or an aquarium escapee.

Behavior

Clownfish live in obligate symbiosis with sea anemones, most often Heteractis magnifica, Stichodactyla gigantea, or S. mertensii. They are immune to the anemone's stinging nematocysts thanks to a specialized mucus coating, and they gain protection from predators in exchange for defending the anemone from butterflyfish that would otherwise nip its tentacles. Within each anemone lives a strict hierarchy: one dominant breeding female, a smaller breeding male, and non-breeding juveniles. If the female dies, the dominant male changes sex and takes her place. All clownfish are born male.

Where to See Them

Any tropical Indo-Pacific reef with healthy anemones. Raja Ampat, Komodo, and the Philippines are particularly productive. Do not handle the anemone; the clownfish's protective mucus is partly derived from its host, and interference can break the symbiosis.

Distribución

Indo-Pacífico tropical: desde las Maldivas hasta el norte de Australia, las islas Ryukyu, y el Sureste Asiático.

Comportamiento

Protandroso: nace macho y puede cambiar a hembra dominante cuando la hembra del grupo muere. Defiende agresivamente su anémona.

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