PacificCourt9
New member
I placed two Blue-Green Chromis into my tank 2 days ago which had so far only been being inhabited by my two ocellaris clowns and some hermit crabs. Initially it meant some nice interactions - the clowns usually stay lazily in the same spot and wait for food to drift for them but now were swimming all over the tank to get food and the four of them were seemingly swimming together peacefully occasionally.
Then one of the chromis died. I also noticed my larger clown had a tiny white chip on his dorsal fin which I didn't think much of until I later found that chromis on his side.
Now after observing I've seen the remaining chromis nipping in the generally vicinity of the clowns - they were swimming too close to his hiding spot, and I'm afraid of him killing one/both the clowns which me and my girlfriend are quite sentimental towards.
Do you think smaller clownfish are vulnerable in this way, or are they feisty tough nuts that can take care of themselves? Whenever I google the question it's the reverse - people worried their clowns will kill the chromis, but I figured these must be properly-grown clownfish. Mine have grown a bit since I bought them but are still small.
Here are pictures to give you an idea of relative size. The chromis is about 5% bigger than the larger clownfish and 10% bigger than the smaller clownfish.

The lower picture shows the chromis being a bit territorial and nipping close-by the clownfish which were utterly ignoring him, ha. But I'm still worried about violence in the night.
Have you ever had a smaller clownfish get killed by fish it would usually beat up when fully grown, or had chromis cause problems for young fish? Should I get a tank divider to keep them apart temporarily, or take the chromis back for maximum safety? Or do you think there's not chance the chromis is going to be able to kill a clownfish almost its same size?
Really appreciate it.
Then one of the chromis died. I also noticed my larger clown had a tiny white chip on his dorsal fin which I didn't think much of until I later found that chromis on his side.
Now after observing I've seen the remaining chromis nipping in the generally vicinity of the clowns - they were swimming too close to his hiding spot, and I'm afraid of him killing one/both the clowns which me and my girlfriend are quite sentimental towards.
Do you think smaller clownfish are vulnerable in this way, or are they feisty tough nuts that can take care of themselves? Whenever I google the question it's the reverse - people worried their clowns will kill the chromis, but I figured these must be properly-grown clownfish. Mine have grown a bit since I bought them but are still small.
Here are pictures to give you an idea of relative size. The chromis is about 5% bigger than the larger clownfish and 10% bigger than the smaller clownfish.

The lower picture shows the chromis being a bit territorial and nipping close-by the clownfish which were utterly ignoring him, ha. But I'm still worried about violence in the night.
Have you ever had a smaller clownfish get killed by fish it would usually beat up when fully grown, or had chromis cause problems for young fish? Should I get a tank divider to keep them apart temporarily, or take the chromis back for maximum safety? Or do you think there's not chance the chromis is going to be able to kill a clownfish almost its same size?
Really appreciate it.