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Clownfish like Amphiprion ocellaris (pictured in in Kimbe Bay, Papua New Guinea) are known to make their homes amid the ...
A clownfish inside an anemone. Scientists monitored and measured 134 colourful clownfish in Kimbe Bay during an intense heat ...
Clownfish, a small orange and white species made famous by the “Finding Nemo” movies, have been found to shrink in order to ...
To survive warming oceans, clownfish cope by shrinking in size. Scientists observed that some of the orange-striped fish ...
Learn how these tiny clownfish, famous for their role in the “Finding Nemo” films, survive the trouble of heatwaves.
Clownfish have been shown to shrink in order to survive heat stress and avoid social conflict, Newcastle University research ...
Scientists discovered that clownfish (the orange and white fish from Finding Nemo) can actually shrink to survive heatwaves.
As the marine world heats up, clownfish are showing an unsuspected talent for adapting to increasingly extreme conditions.
A new study shows that orange clownfish can reduce their body size when water temperatures are unusually high.
The wild clownfish are almost identical to the ones depicted in the movie Finding Nemo, in which a timid clownfish living off ...
A new study reveals that clownfish use a surprising strategy to adapt their bodies to ocean heat waves: They shrink.
To survive warming oceans, clownfish cope by shrinking in size. Scientists observed that some of the orange-striped fish shrank their bodies during a heat wave off the coast of Papua New Guinea.