Is it true...

Is it true...

  • Yes

    Votes: 25 20.5%
  • No

    Votes: 97 79.5%

  • Total voters
    122
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9836138#post9836138 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by glockcoma
I dont know, but I wish that freaken instinct kicked in already for my perc and it jumps in the bta
It almost positively will, i have never had a perc go more than three months w/out beginning to host a bubble tip anemone.
 
I'm really not going to debate this...I voted "Yes" and I have hundreds of reasons. Unfortunately, this topic was covered by me a month ago and I stated clearly and in very much detail why I felt this way. Anyone is more than welcome to go look up my comments, heck even quote me from them over here. I'm really not going to go into it because it would take me ten pages of this thread to explain all that I already have.

By the way, my picasso percs took 9+ months to host a RBTA and only did so because I added a wild caught juvi that was hosting a BTA into the tank(within 5 minutes the TB pics were in there with him).

This is just one of the many examples and resoning and the only one I have the desire to write. And I don't necessarily think that it has to do with cojones or joking, more that they didn't want to be attacked by the 28 people sitting with these guys in their sights(not that either of you would), but to test their manhood over a debate where neither side is or can be right could be misconstrued(don't know if the spelling is right) as a challenge or lack of respect.

Instinct is impossible to debate, believe me, I tried. Then they just changed definitions on me in the middle and made me completely lose interest in this debate. I do feel that I gave many many reasons and points as to why I believe what I believe.
 
When we provide clowns with their natural host they will jump right in, CB or WC.
BTW, BTA is not a natural host of A. prcula or A. ocellaris.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9837545#post9837545 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by OrionN
When we provide clowns with their natural host they will jump right in, CB or WC.
BTW, BTA is not a natural host of A. prcula or A. ocellaris.

so true. Getting a WC perc to host a BTA is the same crap shoot that getting a TB perc to host a BTA is.
 
cschweitzer, i dont think anybody is going to attack, here is my thoughts.

i have seen plenty of WC percs not go into BTA many people have that problem, many do not.

some go right in some do not but, it has nothing to do with whether they were born in the tank.

TB clowns host too many things for me to beleive there is any TRUE or REAL difference.

It would take MANY generations of TB clowns, being kept away from all hosts to get them to start to forget something that has taken hundreds of thousands of years to happen. Instinct is much stronger than you or i can imagine.

OT I took this sociology class that tought that most of human behavior is instinct and humans posses the ability to reason, clowns do not.
this class theorized that most of the behaivior we percieve in ourselves to be learned behaivior is actully controlled by deep instinct. i didnt really agree with it all and we only talked about it one day but the basis for it is the fact that instinct/genetic behaivior is very aparent in twins seperated at birth.. but it just points to the streangth of instinct.
 
By the way, my picasso percs took 9+ months to host a RBTA and only did so because I added a wild caught juvi that was hosting a BTA into the tank(within 5 minutes the TB pics were in there with him).

Just like OrionN said, percs do not naturally host RBTAs in the wild. If its not their natural host, of course you should expect them not to host immediately. If they do, heck, congratulations but if they don't, its nothing unheard of.

Now to look up those statements your typed in the other discussion which btw was only two pages long.

truthfully, the ones you will have problems hosting an anem are the TB clowns.

With all the TB clowns I have owned, I have never had any problems of them hosting. They all had the strong instinct to host their anemone. Of course I provided their natural anemone but they still did not hesitate to host. I don't understand why you say TB clowns will have problems of hosting anemones. Care to explain?


I'm sorry for not clarifying...I didn't mean that TB clowns cannot host, they are just more likely to have issues getting into their anems.

Ditto from what I just said.



I strongly disagree with the instinctual part, in a way...I think in the wild it is instinctual, due directly to the fact that if they do not have their anemone, they will die. In a tank, where there is little or no threat of attack, there is not the same necessity as in the wild. Just like a wild dog would rather eat a human than serve him, whereas a domesticated dog is considered man's best friend. Just as tank bred fish are many times more accepting of food.

I think instincts play a part, but I think moreover that environment is the major deciding factor.

It seems like you were contradicting yourself about instincts playing apart.


But never have I seen a TB clown go directly head first into an anem when being placed into a tank, like every single WC clown I have had has done.

Like I have said before, I bought two Clarkii clowns from Petco and soon as I released them in the tank, they dove right into my blue Haddoni. These were TB clowns.


And here is the thread for reference to prove that I got all those quotes there:
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=1083738&perpage=25&pagenumber=1
 
this is another thing i pulled from that thread


"The reason natural hosts in the wild do not host all types of clownfish is directly related to location...they do not overlap location in the wild."
Where did you find that info? I have never heard that.
it was my understanding that clowns hosting relationship with their anemones was very specific.






here is where i feel you really lose the argument. would a person who has never seen pants before know what to do with them?????

NO WAY. they would have no idea what pants are

But tank bred clowns who have never seen a Host, they host will sometimes dive right into an anemone that is because hosting behaivior is in thier genetic code.


<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9605845#post9605845 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by cschweitzer
If you wore pants for the first 5-10 years of your life and stopped wearing them for the next 20-30, if someone handed you a pair of pants, would you know what to do with them?

<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9605850#post9605850 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by cschweitzer
And it's not like the maroons you have had a choice of hosting or not...it was forced upon them at a young age to be disallowed the option of an anem.
 
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I voted no.

In the wild, the eggs hatch into larvae, which float in the plankton for a few to a few weeks before settling and metamorphizing into juveniles.

At that point, the clowns instinctually find a host anemone. This sure suggests that being hosted by an anemone is a natural behavior that is not learned or taught - it's something clowns have ingrained. [parents are far away, never followed them through their planktonic stage]

The fact that most TB clowns have never seen a predator [or an anemone] along with mis-match of clown + anemone is probably some of the reason why we hear of people having issues with hosting.

I mean, having see a grouper, perhaps the wild clowns just are much more stressed in general and thus immediately take to defensive behavior where the TB is unaware of the dangers a wild clown encounters daily.




I also wonder about the reality that there's a lot of anemones [sadly] that die within the first year of captivity. While it's not obvious to us, perhaps the clowns are aware of stressed/unhealthy anemones and don't find them attractive? Just tossing out the idea ...
 
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Wow...something I hadn't ever thought of before, Mark. Health of the anemone could very plausibly be a factor. Even if proper care is provided for the anemone, improper shipping or capture can lead to its death within a year anyways. Maybe the clowns do know the difference.

I agree that CB clowns have no fear of predation in the aquarium (much like CB mice are much, MUCH calmer than wild counterparts) and so are in less of a rush to seek the safety of an anemone. It just makes sense. Nothing's trying to kill them...why not explore a little and see if there's something else they'd rather host? A nice Mag-Float, perhaps, or the overflow box...hehe ;)
 
I have been having trouble with my isp, but I think I'm back.
OK, there are lots of you that have had sucess with tr clowns. I have seen hosting of them for myself at the LFS. This does not mean that all tr clowns will go to anemones. What I said that got one of the other threads started was that sometimes tr clowns do not live in anemones. I never said, or ment to imply, that tr clowns will never live in anemones.
When man interfears with an animals natural life cycle we alter their behavior. It does not take many generations to do this. Most animals have a natural instinct to fear man, and yet there are people all over the world that take in orphaned, sick, or injered animals. In no time these animals start looking to people for comfort and food. The instinct to fear man has been trashed. This is just one of many examples of how man can change an animals behavior in a very brief period of time. It is not absurd to think that if we raised a clown in a clean empty tank for most of its youth that its behavior would be altered when compaired to a clown that spent most of its youth in an anemone in the wild. The first sight that a wild clown sees is its parents in an anemone. It will not survive unless it finds an anemone for itself. These are the clowns we catch for our aquariums. What makes no sense to me is the idea that we can raise two indviduals in totaly different enviroments and expect the same behavior out of them.
In the pole above 7 or so people voted yes (last time I checked). Assuming they are basing their openions on personal experiance you would have to believe that they are lying for some reason in order for your argument to be true. The other side of the argument only has to believe that you are basing your openion on personal experiance and disreguarding others.
There are tr clowns that dont care about anemones. Just because some people have had good luck with them does not mean that all tr clowns will behave the same way.
 
its not about lying, its about not understanding correctly what and why things happen or are happening.

u are just mistaken. thats all.

you can not take hosting behaivior from a clownfish by breeding it in a tank that is silly
 
I don't understand. Middletonmark and Slakker just stated that tr clowns have no fear of preditors. If this is true, why is it such a leap to believe that their hosting ability could be flawed? Probably the most important instinct that an animal has is the instinct to fear preditors. If we have trashed this basic instinct by tank raising these fish it should come as no suprise that some of them would have problems with hosting.
 
Unfortunately, many of the arguements here on both sides, are based on opinions or experiences that are not actually facts. They are simply one person's assumption as to why something happened.

My opinion is that there isn't a problem with TR fish accepting hosts. There is a problem with ocellaris and percula clowns accepting hosts. I have had more that three cases where WC ocellaris or percula have gone months (in one case over a year) before they accepted a non-gigantea or magnifica anemone.

How many of you have had TR clarki or tomato clowns refuse an anemone for weeks? I'm willing to bet not very many. My TR orange skunk clowns were in an anemone within minutes of being put into the tank.

TR clowns get a bad rap for not accepting anemones because most of them are either ocellaris or percula. If TR clowns were mostly clarki, we would be saying that TR clowns are MORE likely to accept anemones than those stupid WC ocellaris.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9839109#post9839109 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by elegance coral
I don't understand. Middletonmark and Slakker just stated that tr clowns have no fear of preditors.

No offense to Middletonmark or Slakker, but have they done any controlled experiments on whether or not TR clowns fear preditors? Do WC clowns kept in an aquarium for a few months fear preditors? Mine sure don't seem to fear me like they used to.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9839178#post9839178 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by phender
Unfortunately, many of the arguements here on both sides, are based on opinions or experiences that are not actually facts. They are simply one person's assumption as to why something happened.



i include my argument into the opinion based argument pile.
 
TR clowns will not have any problem in accepting their natural hosts. WC or TR will have problems in accepting non natural host anemones. It is a crab shoot when we try to get clowns to pair up with an anemone that they are not naturally associated with.
 
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