phender
Active member
I'm thinking there might be only a handful of you left on this board that have ever seen this species in person. The pics aren't great and they don't show the true carmel color of the fish, but its the best I could do without scaring them.
Here is the evidence. They are not done laying yet.
The female making her pass.
Male making his pass in the background.
I've had these fish for 6 years. I bought them as juveniles. They never showed much bonding behavior, but they didn't beat each other up. At one point the male started to catch up to the female in size and I thought that maybe he was turning into a female. They usually stayed on separate sides of the tank. About a year ago I gave them an anemone. She went in it right away, but wouldn't let him near it. About a month ago, he decided he wanted in too. It took about 2 weeks of hanging around before the female let him in. With a week they were laying eggs. This is their second spawn.
No, I won't be raising the babies. Although they have their own subdued beauty, there is not much of a market for "brown clowns". In addition (if I remember right) the babies hatch out very tiny (too tiny to eat regular sized rotifers) and are difficult to deal with.
I have an older pic that shows the carmel color a lot better, but the site is taking waaaay too long to load it.
Almost forgot to tell what they were. They are A. akindynos (aka: Barrier Reef clowns). They are pretty common in Northeastern Australia. However, I think these were collected in New Caledonia.
Here is the evidence. They are not done laying yet.
The female making her pass.
Male making his pass in the background.
I've had these fish for 6 years. I bought them as juveniles. They never showed much bonding behavior, but they didn't beat each other up. At one point the male started to catch up to the female in size and I thought that maybe he was turning into a female. They usually stayed on separate sides of the tank. About a year ago I gave them an anemone. She went in it right away, but wouldn't let him near it. About a month ago, he decided he wanted in too. It took about 2 weeks of hanging around before the female let him in. With a week they were laying eggs. This is their second spawn.
No, I won't be raising the babies. Although they have their own subdued beauty, there is not much of a market for "brown clowns". In addition (if I remember right) the babies hatch out very tiny (too tiny to eat regular sized rotifers) and are difficult to deal with.
I have an older pic that shows the carmel color a lot better, but the site is taking waaaay too long to load it.
Almost forgot to tell what they were. They are A. akindynos (aka: Barrier Reef clowns). They are pretty common in Northeastern Australia. However, I think these were collected in New Caledonia.