Where Can I Get A Mated Pair Of Black And White Clowns

agent 14

Member
I am lookin to mate a pair of black and white perc. clowns in my 29 gallon tanks im gettin:happy: but all the LFS around me dont sell them....so i was lookin for some info were i can get some when i get my tank:happy: :happy: :happy:
 

viper_930

Active Member
You could ask them to special order you a pair. I ask my LFS for pairs of captive bred true perculas and they do it for me. Those b&w ocellaris mated pair clowns would be expensive though, I'd say around $100. Or are you wanting the black onyx true percula clowns? Those are even more expensive. If you can't get your LFS to special order some, you can look around the web.
 

t n h

Member
may be wrong but i thought if you had a pair one of them would morph into a female amd you would have a pair, may be wrong though:notsure:
 

coxy101

Member
If you live in Michigan, Tropicorium in romulus has a pair that they might sell. I remember a price around $115..
 

coxy101

Member
The easiest way is to get two small ones and they will probably pair up. I got two from Tropicorium for $36. This site sometimes sells them - usually they're on "wish list".
 

agent 14

Member
i was thinkin if i buy 1 and put it in my tank by itself and wait a few weeks to buy the other. will the one that was in the tank turn female since it was the only clown in there?
 

coxy101

Member
The longer you wait to put them together, the more likely they are not going to pair up. It's easiest to get them at the same time with a little bit of a size difference and introduce them at the same time.
 

ecook

Member
Inland Aquatics in Terre HAute, IN breeds their own, and they also ship. Bad news? A bonded pair is gonna set you back $150. I was lucky, and got mine there while they were still only 100.
 
I don't think waiting to introduce clowns to each other for the sake of pairing has any negative impact whatsoever. If anything I think that waiting is probably a good thing because this increases the chance that one clown is considerably larger, thus increasing the chance of pairing because one will be dominant in the relationship.
I say this because I had a pair true percula clowns for 5 years or so that bred that I bought as a pair for over $100. The female of the pair died and the male was left alone. I went to the store and bought the meanest most agressive juvenile clown I could find in hopes that it would beat the male into submission. Well, the male became the dominant one because he was there first and was larger.
The male I had changed his --- to female and then these two clowns bred about 8 months or so later. The male and juvenile had been separated for a long time so I don't think this has anything to do with pairing.
Male that changed sexes bredding with the new mate:
 
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