The anemone will protect a clownfish, the only fish that the anemone will not sting.
what is a anemone? is it a fish
No, sea anemone do not eat fish. Sea anemone eat small bacteria that grows on them.
Clown fish and sea anemone; the clown fish isn't stung by the anemone and makes its home in the anemone while when the clown fish is eating the anemone gets all the leftovers
The Sea Anemone uses clown fish to clean it and the clown fish uses the sea anemone for protection.
No, it is not.
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
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.
Symbiotic relationship, the anemone protects the fish from predators because of its stinging tentacles and the fish will return to the anemone with food to eat and spill some into the anemone which feeds it. The fish is protected by a slimy coat which stops it becoming anemone food.
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.
no
The anemone will protect a clownfish, the only fish that the anemone will not sting.