my clown seems to be so much happier now that she has a playmate. Is this normal in the wild because i didn't think that clowns were schooling fish?? but now that she has a tank mate she swims more, eats more, and is doing overall better. can anyone explain this for me.
Clownfish in the wild choose a mate to spread their genetic material while maintaining a group of subadults in the event that one of the breeders dies.
They don't school but they do form a breeding pair. You're seeing the more natural behavior of clownfish.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9165902#post9165902 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MarinaP Wrong. They do school in the wild, chrysoterus might be an example.
I've read that in a few places too. There's the high female, then male, then a bunch of juvis in line in case one of the elders dies. Couldn't cite you right offhand though, it was a respectable site though.
A school of fish is a group of fish swim in synchronize, a behavior to improve their survival in open water. Clown fish babies will ball up. In the wild clown fish may live as a group with their anemone but not as a school.
A familial group is a shoal; as previously mentioned, a school of fish moves in a synchronized way, with the fish spending the vast majority of their time facing the same direction and moving the same ways.
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