is the relationship between the clown fish and sea anemone
good!
The anemone will protect a clownfish, the only fish that the anemone will not sting.
The relation ship between the anemone and the clown fish is called a symbiotic relationship.
In a mutual relationship, both creatures benefit from the relationship. An example would be a clown fish and an anemone, the anemone provides protection for the clown fish, and the clown fish cleans the anemone and attracts prey for the anemone to eat. This is why mutualism could be described as a helpful relationship.
mutualism
The anemone will protect a clownfish, the only fish that the anemone will not sting.
the relationship is that the anemone is dangerous to other fish but the clown fish is immune to its shocks so the anemone houses the clown fish and it eats the clown fish's waste
Symbiosis is demonstrated by the clown fish being protected by the anemone's stinging tentacles from predatory fish. The anemone is protected by the teratorial clown fish from anemone-eating fish. The clown fish has a mucus on its body that keeps the anemone from stinging it and becoming a food source. They protect each other in a near perfect symbiotic relationship.
The relationship of the clown fish and sea anemone is symbiotic in that the clownfish, having a coating of mucous that makes it immune to the anemone's deadly sting, can swim in safety in the anemone's tentacles, meanwhile attracting other fish as food for the anemone.
By cleaning it and sometimes also by attracting passively other fishes.
There are no disadvantages, but the only thing is that the sea anemone might make the clown fish get stuck in its grass-like things
The Clown or Anemone fish lives in a "Symbiotic" relationship with its host Anemone in that they both depend on the other for food and/or protection. It is not a type of "commmensalism" where only one actually benefits from the relationship. In this relationship they both benefit from each other so this relationship is properly termed or defined as Symbiosis.