zonkers":g927ae7j said:Perhaps a healthy, well fed anemone provides better protection to the clownfish?
Snapper":g927ae7j said:eons of symbiotic evolution. It is pro-survival to both species, ...the anemone benefits, therefore lives, and the fish benefits from the shelter/protection. Eloquent.
Oops, did I just start another "evolution" thread?
Indeed, aquarists have added much to knowledge of this symbiosis. Many have seen fish bring food to their anemones. This behaviour seems confined to aquaria. The normal diet of clownfishes is small plants and animals that live in the water above the anemone, or algae that grow around it (chapter 4). In nature, they do not encounter large particles of food, so they eat their food where it is found. Feeding large morsels to a fish in an aquarium produces an artifact: the fish, unable to devour the piece immediately, takes it home to work on it in the relative security of its own territory, as is typical of predators that obtain food in large amounts. But the territory in this case consumes the food!
Snapper":qn4286r3 said:Not leaning in the direction of "conscious thought." Rather, over eons, as a symbiosis develops, there are certain "acts" or tendencies that promote the continued "well-being" of a symbiotic pair. ...And things that detract.
I think it's logical to say, the things both partners do, that tend to promote the survival of each, and therefore the symbiotic relationship, grants their genes a competitive advantage as the genetic chain continues to propagate.
Over time, these traits, acts, whatever you call them, get passed on. Those poor pairs that do things that detract are culled from the gene pool, those who do cooperative things, win the race.
I think the feeding behavior we see in our tanks is related to the homing instinct. I've dove about 1,000 times in the indo-pacific and have observed enumerable anemone/clown pair systems. When threatened the clowns always dash back into/under the host. Perhaps, a large floating food particle in a tank is seen as a threat, or, once the clown has grabbed it, to protect his prize, he "runs home."