Three-band Anemonefish Breeding Guide
Breeding Amphiprion tricinctus: protandrous pair formation, the anemonefish demersal spawning pattern, male egg care, and rearing pelagic larvae on rotifers then Artemia.
Overview
Amphiprion tricinctus is endemic to the Marshall Islands in the western Pacific and grows to about 13 cm. It is a host generalist, recorded with eight of the nine local host anemones, including the bubble-tip anemone Entacmaea quadricolor, Heteractis crispa, Stichodactyla haddoni and Mertens' carpet sea anemone Stichodactyla mertensii. The species has been bred in captivity.
Sexing
It is a sequential hermaphrodite with a strict size-based dominance hierarchy in which the female is largest, the breeding male is second largest and male non-breeders get progressively smaller. It exhibits protandry: the breeding male changes to female if the sole breeding female dies. Raising juveniles together so the dominant fish becomes the female is the standard way to form a pair.
Conditioning
A bonded pair held in a stable, warm reef and fed frequently on a varied diet comes into breeding condition. A host anemone such as Entacmaea quadricolor is readily accepted but is not strictly required for spawning in captivity.
Breeding Setup
Species-level egg and larval data are not documented, so breeding follows the general anemonefish pattern. The breeding setup provides a flat, defensible spawning surface such as rock within the pair's territory near any host anemone present.
Spawning Behavior & Trigger
As an anemonefish it is a demersal substrate spawner: the pair deposits adhesive eggs on the prepared flat surface near its territory and fertilizes them externally. A settled pair under stable reef parameters and frequent feeding spawns in repeated cycles.
Egg & Fry Care
Following the anemonefish pattern, the male tends the nest, fanning and cleaning the eggs until they hatch. Larvae are pelagic and are reared in captivity on small live foods, starting with rotifers and moving to Artemia nauplii as the larvae grow.
Common Challenges
Because species-specific egg, incubation and larval figures are not documented, breeders rely on the general anemonefish behavior. As with all clownfish, the planktonic larval phase is the bottleneck, demanding a continuous supply of correctly sized live food and stable, high-quality water.