Female
Yes it is true. If the dominant female dies the dominant male will change sex and become the next dominant female.
Not all fish are born females. In clownfish, all individuals are born male and have the potential to become female based on social and environmental triggers. This unique reproductive pattern is known as protandrous hermaphroditism.
The female lays her eggs and the male fertilises them.
The gender of clownfish can usually be determined by size, behavior, and color. In most cases, the female will be larger and more dominant than the male, while the male may be more brightly colored. Additionally, if you observe spawning behavior, the larger fish laying eggs is likely the female.
Male because it has testosterone which make it more agresive
To my knowledge there is not a specialty name for a male Clown fish.
the clown fish are all born male but they have to chaange gender into a female so they can mate with the domonaite male
clownfish are all born males and the dominant male of a group will turn female when the female of that group dies.
Clown fish are not schooling fish; initially they are all male, and at some point they will pair off and one will become female, they then spend their entire lives in and around their anemone.
Clown fish are born genderless. if the head female dies, one of the other fish change to a female. once it is a female, it can't go back to a male or genderless. the process is this: genderless---> male ---> female. It can't reverse.
In groups of clowns (3 or more) one becomes female, and the rest remain males.
Yes, the female is larger than the male. Also if you do not have two of the same species ( like clown fish for example), it may start out as a male, but gradually become female. Once it is female and is ready to mate, you can tell because it will generally swim vertically along one of the walls or such.