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Amphiprion hybrid White Cap Orange Skunk Clown, Amphiprion hybrid

Amphiprion hybrid is commonly referred to as White Cap Orange Skunk Clown, Amphiprion hybrid. Difficulty in the aquarium: moyen. A aquarium size of at least 180 Liter is recommended. Toxicity: Toxic hazard unknown.


Profilbild Urheber AndiV

Copyright iBluewater, USA




Uploaded by AndiV.

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Profile

lexID:
8013 
AphiaID:
Scientific:
Amphiprion hybrid 
German:
Amphiprion Hybrid oder neue Art 
English:
White Cap Orange Skunk Clown, Amphiprion Hybrid 
Category:
Poissons-Clowns 
Family tree:
Amphiprion (Genus) > hybrid (Species) 
Occurrence:
Western Indian Ocean 
Size:
3.15" - 3.54" (8cm - 9cm) 
Temperature:
71.6 °F - 80.6 °F (22°C - 27°C) 
Food:
Amphipods, Brine Shrimp Nauplii, Brine Shrimps, Copepods, Cyclops, Daphnia salina, Invertebrates, Krill, Mysis, Pellets 
Tank:
39.6 gal (~ 180L)  
Difficulty:
moyen 
Offspring:
Possible to breed 
Toxicity:
Toxic hazard unknown 
CITES:
Not evaluated 
Red List:
Not evaluated (NE) 
Related species at
Catalog of Life
:
 
More related species
in this lexicon
:
 
Author:
Publisher:
Meerwasser-Lexikon.de
Created:
Last edit:
2015-02-19 18:30:22 

Élevages

Des élevages de Amphiprion hybrid sont possibles. Malheureusement il y en a pas assez pour le commerce. Si vous vous intéressez pour Amphiprion hybrid demandez a votre commerçant du élevage. Si vous avez déjà Amphiprion hybrid essayez vous même de faire un élevage! Vous pourriez aider au commerce et de protéger la nature.

Info

Very special thanks for these photo of a special clownfish to Bob from iBluewater, USA.

Here is the fish´s story:

"White Cap Orange Skunk Clown

Almost a decade has gone by since I first heard about sightings of a "White Cap Orange Skunk Clown". On many collection trips to the Indo-Pacific region, I tried my best to dive areas where their supposed sightings happened. Still, I never did get to see one.

I was almost convinced that the White Cap Skunk was in fact a Thiellei that my regular collectors misidentified as a "new type of orange skunk". Not wanting to offend or discourage my collectors from letting me in on other variant finds, we pressed on.

Every now and then, word of sighting a White Cap Skunk would surface. This went on for many years and many dive/collect trips.

This year, on a collection trip to Madagascar, I was fortunate to have
collected several Madagascar Anemonefish (A. Latifasciatus) without any hitches. Left with 11 spare days, I made a decision to head for the Indo-Pacific to look for some A. Thiellei.
4 days and multiple dives later, my Indo-Pacific counterpart informed me that the elusive White Cap Orange Skunk had been sighted by a villager who frequently free dives those remotest of island chains in that region. He had spotted a single specimen. To be sure, I had to see this.

The old villager took us to the site where he had spotted the White Cap. Fortunately, Clownfish in the wild generally do not venture further than 3 to 4 feet from their host anemone, A. Clarkii being the rare exception. They have been known to venture as much as 8 feet from their host anemones. To get the advantage of less noise intrusion into the undersea world, plus longer dive times, I use a rebreather instead of regular scuba tanks.

I was amazed that without so much as a GPS the old villager was able to point us to the exact location of the White Cap Skunk. Just seconds after descending to a depth of about 24 feet, I was able to spot the White Cap Orange Skunk Clownfish. This was no "unicorn" fish. It was completely real. What a find! Just a little shy of 2 inches, it swam into my perforated plastic bottle. Dive over, I set my GPS for a soon second trip. The old villager had more good news - he hand signaled that he had seen 3 more by a smaller island chain. More?

I have made arranges with friends in Europe who are experts at sequencing DNA to sequence the DNA of this White Cap Orange Skunk against that of Amphiprion ocellaris, A. Thiellei, A. periderion, and A. sandaracinos so that we can definitively know if in fact the White Cap Orange Skunk is a new species of Amphiprion, or a hybrid of one of the above mentioned Amphiprions. No disappointments either way. It would be very nice to know."

External links

  1. Homepage ibluewater.com (en). Abgerufen am 07.08.2020.

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