Clownfish spend their entire lives nestling in the protective tentacles of host anemones, but new research shows that as babies they sometimes travel hundreds of kilometres across the open ocean.
The orange clownfish -- a species known to millions thanks to the film "Finding Nemo" -- may soon join the list of endangered species as its coral reef homes continue to be hammered by ongoing climate ...
The humble clownfish is smaller than a human fist. But when a diver approaches its underwater home, among the tentacles of a sea anemone on the world's coral reefs, the little orange creature rears up ...
Belgian Gardens State School kids will continue getting hands-on experience caring for rare fish after the primary school ...
Adam Downie receives funding from the University of Queensland, and the Goodman Foundation Research Grant Scheme through the Morton Bay Research station. He is a member of the Australian Society for ...
In the Pixar hit movie Finding Nemo, the father clownfish made an epic journey across the ocean meeting all sort of marine creatures to find and be reunited with his young son and while the story is ...
Fish may be literally incapable of finding home in the acidified seas of a carbon-soaked future. When they're raised in waters with an acidity comparable to what's expected by the 21st century's end, ...
Clownfish adults closely guarded their eggs in a nest and butterfly fish gave no parental care to their offspring, which stayed at sea for around 38 days. "We've got two different species with vastly ...
The humble clownfish is smaller than a human fist. But when a diver approaches its underwater home, among the tentacles of a sea anemone on the world’s coral reefs, the little orange creature rears up ...