Lightning Maroon Clown Fish - Bonded Pair
Diet & Feeding
Mocha Vincis are exceptionally hardy eaters and accept a wide variety of aquarium foods. To maintain their rich chocolate and vibrant orange coloration, offer a varied diet:
High-quality marine pellets and flakes.
Mysis shrimp, brine shrimp, and chopped krill.
Foods enriched with carotenoids and spirulina to enhance color vibrancy.
Behavior & Reef Compatibility
Reef Safe: 100% reef safe. They will not bother corals, clams, or other invertebrates.
Anemone Hosting: Like all A. ocellaris, they do not strictly require an anemone to thrive. However, they will readily host in Bubble Tip Anemones (Entacmaea quadricolor), Magnificent Anemones (Heteractis magnifica), or alternative corals like Torch corals, Torch-style LPS, or soft leather corals.
Pairing: They can be kept singly or in pairs. To establish a pair, introduce a smaller juvenile to an established larger fish; the larger individual will transition into the dominant female.
Hobbyist Tip: Because Mocha Vincis are tank-bred, they are incredibly resilient to common shipping stress and adapt to artificial aquarium environments and prepared foods much faster than wild-caught specimens.
ParameterRecommended Range
Care LevelEasy to Moderate (Hardy, but aggressive)
Minimum Tank Size30 Gallons (Single); 55–75+ Gallons (Bonded Pair with tankmates)
Temperature74°F – 80°F (Stable)
Salinity / Specific Gravity1.020 – 1.026
pH8.1 – 8.4
Alkalinity (dKH)8 – 12
Nitrate< 20 ppm
TemperamentSemi-Aggressive to Aggressive (Highly territorial)
Reef SafeYes (May occasionally irritate hosted corals)
Behavioral & Pair Dynamics
Sexual Dimorphism & Size Disparity: In an established pair, the female is the absolute boss. She can grow up to a massive 6 inches, while the subordinate male stays significantly smaller, often maxing out around 2.5 to 3 inches.
The "Maroon Twitch": To maintain the peace, the smaller male will frequently perform a submissive, seizure-like quivering or twitching motion sideways near the female. In Maroons, the male may also uniquely slide next to the female and "kiss" her cheek spines to show submission.
Intense Territoriality: Once bonded, the pair will claim a specific zone in the tank (usually around an anemone or a favorite rock structure) and defend it fiercely. The female will not hesitate to bite hand down in her territory or bully fish that swim too close.
Husbandry & Tank Setup
### 🏠 Habitat & Aquascaping
Provide a robust aquascape with plenty of live rock to form natural caves, sight-line breaks, and territory boundaries. This allows other tankmates to escape the pair's line of sight. Maroons are notorious for "redecorating" by fanning their tails to clear sand away from their chosen home base.
### 🪸 Anemone Hosting
While they do not need an anemone to survive, they will readily host one. Their natural symbiont is the Bubble Tip Anemone (Entacmaea quadricolor). If an anemone isn't present, they may host in fleshy LPS corals (like Torch or Elegance corals) or soft corals, which can sometimes irritate the coral tissue.
### 🥩 Diet & Feeding
Maroons are eager, enthusiastic omnivores with healthy appetites. Feed a varied diet 2–3 times daily consisting of:
High-quality pellet and flake foods.
Frozen Mysis and brine shrimp.
Nutrient-rich herbivore or spirulina preparations.
Compatibility & Tankmates
⚠️ CRITICAL WARNING: NO OTHER CLOWNFISH
Never mix Lightning Maroon Clownfish with other clownfish species in the same aquarium. The resulting territorial warfare is almost always fatal unless housed in a massive system (150+ gallons) with completely separate rock structures.
Ideal Tankmates: Choose robust, fast-moving, or semi-aggressive fish that can hold their own and will stay out of the clowns' immediate territory. Excellent options include Tangs, large Wrasses, Dwarf Angels, Blennies, and Dottybacks.
Fish to Avoid: Avoid timid, passive, or slow-moving fish like Firefish, small Gobies, or Mandarin Dragonets, as they can easily be bullied out of food or injured if they wander into the pair's zone.
Invertebrates: They are perfectly safe with reef clean-up crews, including snails, hermit crabs, and larger ornamental shrimp.
Important Handling Note
🚨 Do Not Use Net Bags!
Maroon Clownfish possess sharp, prominent cheek spines (suborbital spines) just below their eyes. If you use a standard mesh fish net, these spines will get heavily entangled, causing severe stress or injury to the fish. Always use a solid plastic specimen container or a plastic colander to catch and move them.