dantodd
New member
While this isn't related to the most clowns in a tank it is interesting and peripherally related. It is a study of group size and maintenance in percula clowns hosting H. magnifica
• Buston, Peter M.. 2003. Forcible eviction and prevention of recruitment in the clown anemonefish. Behavioral Ecology. Vol: 14. Pages 576-582.
"Groups composed of a single breeding pair and of zero to four nonbreeding subordinates occupied individual sea anemones (Heteractis magnifica), which provided the fish with oviposition sites and protection from predators. Group size increased linearly with anemone size."
http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/576
Found the full PDF version of the article: http://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/~buston/pdfs/buston.behavecol.pdf
• Buston, Peter M.. 2003. Forcible eviction and prevention of recruitment in the clown anemonefish. Behavioral Ecology. Vol: 14. Pages 576-582.
"Groups composed of a single breeding pair and of zero to four nonbreeding subordinates occupied individual sea anemones (Heteractis magnifica), which provided the fish with oviposition sites and protection from predators. Group size increased linearly with anemone size."
http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/576
Found the full PDF version of the article: http://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/~buston/pdfs/buston.behavecol.pdf
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