flipping ouch! Elegance how did the clown recover? Have any updated pics?
I was really worried about this fish for about 24 hours. It hid in the rocks, breathing very heavy, color was pale, and looked to be on the verge of death. The next day, it did come out. Its color looked better, its breathing had improved, and it was shedding a layer of slime. I look at this like a snake bite. Some people survive. Some don't. It's never a good thing though.
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I realize that the anemone is the "host" the host "fish" would be the animal that is being hosted. I am also aware that the clownfish builds up a slime coat to protect itself from the anemone...healthy fish have healthy slime coats. Hence my healthy fish statement.
The building of slime coat theory was accepted for a long time, but most recent theories(and I say theories because nothing has been totally proven on this, there seems to be no absolute) and depending on which author you side w/ there are mixed opinions, but the most common at this time is that clowns either discharge sting cells, or absorb sting cells.
This is why most think the clowns suck on tentacles, or groom and rub on tentacles.
Healthy fish dont get eaten by anemones.
ANY TIME a clown is in an anemone, it risks being eaten.
That being said, my clarkiis have driven off the ORA's and are now hosting that anemone.
Its not like this is some new method that your brother/cousin/wholesaler invented. People have been trying it for at least 20 years.A common forum misconception is that (More posts = More experience and knowledge.)
Im bowing out of this.
The method works.
Its not like this is some new method that your brother/cousin/wholesaler invented. People have been trying it for at least 20 years.
Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes the fish reject the anemone once put back into the tank. There isn't a great risk that a clown will get eaten by a BTA during this process, but there is with other anemones.
If you want a BTA to host your clowns and you have no patience, just don't get ocellaris or percula clowns.
FWIW, In my 30 years of clown/anemone keeping, I have never had a clown, once it was acclimated to an anemone, be eaten. I have had clowns die of disease and old age, but none of them have ever been eaten. They just fall out of the anemone. I'm not stating this as a fact. It is just my experience.
Maybe I missed something here. Why is it that someone would want to force a clown to host. I would think that the fish would be more content if allowed to make that choice for themselves.
I had ocellaris clowns that hosted in pulsing xenia. When I added a nem (rose BTA) to the tank, I had to herd the female close to it just so that she knew that it was in the tank. Once she saw it she dove right in and is happy to make it her home. She has since spawned twice. She never did that when the clowns were in the xenia.
if you still doubt check out this link, not only do they eat fish...
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1210425