In the film Finding Nemo, a young clownfish's mother is eaten by a barracuda but his father, Marlin survives. Nemo, the only surviving baby, is then lost. Marlin sets out to find his son, before Nemo eventually finds his way back to his father.
In reality, if a mother clownfish is eaten, its mate changes sex completely and becomes a female, even laying eggs, researchers from University of Exeter in the UK have found.
Clownfish - which have a distinctive orange colour with blue-white stripes bordered by black - live in tropical climates on anemones where they stay their entire lives.
Male fish tend to look after the eggs and fan them while females act as security guards, scanning the surroundings for predators, issuing warning calls and even launching attacks, they said.
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Female clownfish are larger and more aggressive than males and even attack sharks.
"Clownfish don't move from their anemone for their whole life. The largest individual is the female, and if that she gets predated upon or dies, the male then changes sex and becomes a reproductive female," said Suzanne Mills, evolutionary biologist at Centre de Recherches Insulaires et Observatoire de l'Environnement (CRIOBE) in France.
"So when Nemo finally gets back to his anemone at the end of the film, he's actually meeting his Mum," she said.
When the female dies or is eaten then the male changes sex over a few weeks.
"Because of the sex change the same individual can have an opportunity to breed as a male and a female. The couple defends the anemone together in their own way and they both need each other to survive and reproduce," said Ricardo Beldade, a marine biologist at CRIOBE.
Researchers are investigating how the hormonal, behavioural and physiological characteristics of anemonefish are affected by climate change and other human-induced changes such as boat engine noise.
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