Captive-bred clownfish breeding is the most active aquaculture program in the marine hobby. ORA, Sustainable Aquatics, Proaquatix, Bali Aquarich, Sea & Reef have all developed signature lines. Here are the strains worth collecting.
Originator: Various breeders working from a foundational mutation. Pure white body with no visible bars. Rare, expensive ($250-600), and slow to produce captive-bred. Browse Wyoming White listings →
White with broken black-bar markings. Snowflake = orange body; Black Snowflake = black body. $40-150. Stable line, propagates well.
Heavy white striping that intersects across the body in chaotic patterns. Premium grade Picassos clear $200; standard $80-150.
Cross of Black Ocellaris + Snowflake. Black body with broken white bars. $100-200.
Sea & Reef line. Mostly white with thin black accents. $150-300.
Bali Aquarich line. Brown body with cream stripes that flow Vinci-style. $100-200.
White body with curved bars that swirl across the body. $80-200.
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Browse designer clownfish →Yes. Captive-bred designer strains are second or third generation aquacultured stock - they accept frozen and pellet from day one, tolerate lower salinity (1.020-1.025 vs 1.024-1.026), and have ~70% lower DOA risk than wild-caught.
Standard Black & White Ocellaris or Snowflake Ocellaris. Both are widely captive-bred, hardy, peaceful, and run $30-80 per fish - approachable price point with strong genetics.
Yes - all are Amphiprion ocellaris regardless of color pattern. Pairs of different strains will produce mixed-pattern fry. This is how new strains develop.
Amphiprion ocellaris and A. percula are distinct species. Ocellaris is the species farmed for nearly every designer strain - hardier, captive-bred-friendly, wider parameter tolerance. Percula has thicker black outlines and is true to wild-type. Onyx Percula and Picasso are Percula-species strains; Snowflake, Black Ice, Wyoming White, Mocha Storm are all Ocellaris.
Grades reflect pattern adherence to the breeder standard. Picasso Grade A has the most extended white bars; Grade C has minimal bar extension. Grade does not affect hardiness - it is purely cosmetic. Grade A fetches 2-3x the Grade C price and is the right pick if you are pair-bonding for future breeding.
Some lines yes, most no. Heavily-inbred ultra-rare strains (high-grade Picasso, MochaVinci) show higher fry mortality and slightly higher disease susceptibility. Mainstream designer lines from ORA / Sea & Reef are bred to the same QT protocol as wild-type - quarantine for 30 days regardless of strain or origin.
Pattern stability at 12-18 months. Juveniles under 1.5 inch may show partial bars that develop fully or fade as the fish matures. Buy 2-2.5 inch sub-adults if the specific pattern matters - by that size what you see is what you keep.
Yes - they are the same species. Cross-pairings can spawn but offspring pattern is unpredictable; you might get all-Wyoming, all-wild-type, or mixed. If your goal is fry sales of named strain, pair Wyoming with Wyoming (or another fixed-strain partner) for predictable offspring.
Recommendations on this page cross-checked against the following authoritative references and our internal vendor + breeder database.