Actually by sucking on the anemone's tentacles it causes the anemone to secrete more mucus which the clown rubs on their skin so the anemone can't detect the clown, thus not stinging it. :rolleye1:
Actually by sucking on the anemone's tentacles it causes the anemone to secrete more mucus which the clown rubs on their skin so the anemone can't detect the clown, thus not stinging it. :rolleye1:
There have been at least a couple different theories on this depending on which books you read, that's why I was somewhat vague in my explanation because really we still know very little about these animals, but most agree somehow it is how they gain immunity, and normal behavior.
I had a little male ocellaris that would hold on to a tentacle when he got tired of fighting the flow. It was kinda cute. He'd just be flapping in the breeze with a tentacle in his mouth.
My understanding was that the cnidocytes were not discharging the nematocyst when the clowns are (properly) hosting. But... I guess that does depend on who you ask.
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