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Continue ShoppingPhoton Storm Clownfish
Care Level: Easy
Diet: Omnivore
Temperament: Peaceful to Semi-Aggressive
Reef-Safe: Yes
Venomous/Toxic: No
Approximate Purchase Size: 1.25-2"
Approximate Max Size: Around 3-4"
Recommended Tank Size: 20 Gallons or Larger
The Photon Storm Clownfish (Amphiprion ocellaris x Amphiprion percula) is a designer hybrid clownfish known for its dramatic Storm-style white patterning, dark body coloration, and unique blend of Ocellaris and Percula genetics. It was created by crossing a Black Storm Clownfish with an Onyx Percula Clownfish, resulting in a fish with bold white markings, black to brown coloration, and plenty of individual pattern variation.
Photon Storm Clownfish often show extensive white markings across the body and face, with dark coloration that may deepen as the fish matures. Juveniles may appear more brown or mocha-toned, while adults can develop a darker black appearance. Basically, this fish starts as a designer clownfish and then slowly unlocks its dramatic final form, because apparently even clownfish needed character progression.
Photon Storm Clownfish are usually captive-bred, hardy, reef-safe, and well-suited for both beginner and experienced saltwater aquarists. Their care is very similar to standard Ocellaris Clownfish, making them a strong choice for reef tanks, nano reefs, and peaceful community aquariums.
This species does not require an anemone to thrive. It may host in one if available, but it may also choose coral, rockwork, aquarium equipment, a powerhead corner, or the exact spot in the aquarium that makes photography as annoying as possible. Clownfish remain tiny real estate agents with terrible taste.
Note: Image is a representation of what to expect. The fish you receive may vary slightly in size, color, pattern, barring, grade, and overall appearance.
A minimum tank size of 20 gallons or larger is recommended for a Photon Storm Clownfish. A single clownfish or compatible pair can do well in this range, while larger aquariums provide better stability and more flexibility with tank mates.
Although some clownfish care guides list smaller minimums, 20 gallons or larger is a more comfortable shop-safe recommendation, especially for long-term care, pairs, or community setups. Nano tanks can work, but they also turn small mistakes into full chemistry documentaries, because apparently water likes drama.
Photon Storm Clownfish are hardy and adaptable, making them a great choice for reef tanks, nano reefs, and peaceful community aquariums.
Aquascaping: Provide live rock, caves, and open swimming space. Clownfish often claim one area of the aquarium and defend it like they signed paperwork and hired legal counsel.
Substrate: Sand, fine aragonite, crushed coral, or bare-bottom systems can all work. Clownfish are flexible here, which is one of the rare moments this hobby offers mercy.
Rockwork: Live rock is recommended for shelter, biological filtration, and overall aquarium stability.
Anemone Hosting: An anemone is not required. Captive-bred clownfish can thrive without one, though they may still host in an anemone if available. They may also host in coral, rockwork, aquarium equipment, or a deeply inconvenient corner because clownfish enjoy making aquascapers look foolish.
Tank Cover: A tight-fitting lid is recommended. Clownfish are not the worst jumpers, but the floor remains undefeated and smug about it.
Photon Storm Clownfish are hardy once established, but they still do best in clean, stable saltwater conditions. “Easy” means forgiving, not magically immune to whatever chemistry nonsense humans manage to create in a glass box.
Temperature: 75-80°F
pH Level: 8.1-8.4
Salinity: 1.020-1.026 specific gravity
Ammonia, Nitrite, and Nitrate: Ammonia and nitrite should remain undetectable. Nitrate should be kept as low as reasonably possible, ideally below 20 ppm.
Water Flow: Low to moderate flow is ideal. They can handle typical reef flow but should have calmer areas where they can rest and establish territory.
Photon Storm Clownfish are omnivores and usually accept a wide variety of frozen, prepared, meaty, and algae-based foods. Captive-bred clownfish are generally strong eaters and are usually well-adjusted to aquarium diets, which is one rare moment where the saltwater hobby does not immediately choose suffering.
Frozen Food: Offer mysis shrimp, enriched brine shrimp, marine blends, and finely chopped frozen foods. We at Summit City Coral prefer frozen foods such as LRS Reef Frenzy and PE Mysis.
Prepared Omnivore Foods: High-quality marine pellets, flakes, and omnivore blends can help provide a balanced diet. Smaller pellet sizes are best for juvenile fish.
Algae-Based Foods: Spirulina flakes, marine algae blends, or mixed omnivore foods can be included occasionally for variety.
Small Meaty Foods: Copepods, amphipods, finely chopped marine foods, and other small meaty options can help support natural feeding behavior.
Feed small amounts 1-2 times per day. Avoid overfeeding, even when the clownfish acts like one missed pellet is a formal declaration of war.
Photon Storm Clownfish are generally peaceful and work well in community reef aquariums. Like most clownfish, they may become more territorial as they mature, form a pair, or choose a hosting area.
Fish: Gobies, blennies, cardinalfish, firefish, chromis, peaceful wrasses, dwarf angelfish, tangs in larger aquariums, and other peaceful to semi-peaceful community fish.
Avoid: Large predatory fish, aggressive damsels, large triggers, groupers, lionfish, and fish that may bully or eat them. Avoid mixing with other clownfish unless pairing is intentional and the aquarium is large enough.
Invertebrates: Safe with most cleaner shrimp, hermit crabs, snails, urchins, and other common reef invertebrates.
Coral: Photon Storm Clownfish are considered reef-safe and should not bother soft corals, LPS, SPS, zoanthids, mushrooms, clams, or anemones.
Temperament: Peaceful to semi-aggressive. Usually calm with other fish, but may defend a chosen area once established.
Captive-Bred Advantage: Captive-bred specimens usually adapt well to prepared foods, aquarium conditions, and life without a natural host anemone.
Hybrid Genetics: Photon Storm Clownfish are a hybrid designer clownfish with both Ocellaris and Percula genetics. Their care remains very similar to standard Ocellaris Clownfish.
Pairing: Can be kept singly or as a pair. When pairing clownfish, it is usually best to introduce two juveniles or one larger and one smaller individual to reduce fighting.
Designer Pattern: Photon Storm Clownfish may vary widely in white coverage, dark body coloration, face markings, and overall pattern. The irregular Storm-style white pattern is the main visual appeal, because apparently clownfish needed a collector’s edition with DLC.
Color Development: Juveniles may appear more brown or mocha-toned and can darken as they mature. Final coloration may vary depending on genetics, age, diet, lighting, and mood.
Hosting Behavior: They do not need an anemone, but may host in one if available. They may also host in coral, rockwork, aquarium equipment, or the least photogenic corner possible.
Reef Compatibility: Excellent for reef tanks. They are safe with coral and most invertebrates.
Adult Size: Photon Storm Clownfish usually stay around 3-4 inches, making them manageable for many reef aquariums.
Sex Change: Clownfish are protandrous hermaphrodites, meaning the dominant individual becomes female in a pair. Nature apparently looked at aquarium stocking plans and decided to improvise.
Jumping: A tight-fitting lid is recommended. Even captive-bred designer clownfish are still fish, tragically powered by fish-level judgment.
This acclimation method helps reduce stress by gradually introducing the fish to your aquarium’s temperature and water chemistry.
Turn off aquarium lights to reduce stress. If you have an Auto Top Off system, switch it off before starting acclimation.
Float the sealed bag in the aquarium for 15-20 minutes to allow the temperature in the bag to equalize with the tank.
Carefully open the bag and transfer the fish and shipping water into a clean bucket or container.
Add 1/4 cup of tank water to the container every 5 minutes for 40 minutes.
Once acclimation is complete, gently transfer the fish into the aquarium using a net or specimen container. Discard the shipping water. Do not pour shipping water into your aquarium.
You may need to replace the saltwater removed during acclimation with fresh mixed saltwater.
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