Beautiful clownfish can go where other creatures dare not go

Clown fish are gorgeous and colourful and they have captured our hearts since seeing the adorable Nemo finding his way home in the Disney superhit from 2003. Their unique colouring and dramatic striping makes them one of the most recognizable fish on the reef. But what makes them truly unique is a little known adaptation that allows them to hide among the venomous, stinging anemones that grow among the corals. Clown fish are covered in a mucous that protects them from the stings. The mucous is based on sugars instead of the usual proteins and the anemone fails to recognize the clown fish as food. This symbiotic relationship provides the clownfish with protection from predators that cannot touch the anemone. The clownfish also benefits from scraps of food left from the anemone's meals. In return, the clownfish wards off predators that would eat the tentacles of the anemone. Loyal to the anemone that it adopts, the clownfish will remain and defend the anemone. The anemone also benefits by consuming the excrement of the clownfish. Clownfish must constantly produce their protective mucous to be able to nestle among the tentacles. By constantly rubbing their skin on the tentacles, they also accumulate mucous from the anemone, which combines with the own to help them produce a thicker and more effective coating. Clownfish have another surprising adaptation. They begin their lives as males. In a colony of clownfish, the dominant pair mate but the others do not. The non breeding males will remain small and submissive in order to not pose a threat to the dominant pair and be evicted from the colony. If the dominant female dies, another male will become female and take her place for reproduction. Clownfish are the most popular of the aquarium fish, making up nearly half of the global ornamental marine trade.