Clark's anemonefish is a small-sized
fish which grows up to as a male and as a female. It is stocky, laterally compressed, and oval to rounded. It is colorful, with vivid black, white, and yellow stripes, though the exact pattern shows considerable geographical variation. Usually it is black dorsally and orange-yellow ventrally, the black areas becoming wider with age. There are two vertical white bands, one behind the eye and one above the anus, and the
caudal peduncle is white. The
snout is orange or pinkish. The
dorsal and
caudal fins are orange-yellow, and the caudal fin is generally lighter in tone than the rest of the body, sometimes becoming whitish.
Color variations Clark's anemonefish shows the greatest color variations of any anemonefish, with variations based on location, sex, age and host anemone. Adults in
Vanuatu and
New Caledonia are orange-yellow with two vertical white bands.
Sex related color differences may be present, such as the female having a white caudal fin and the male having a yellow caudal fin. Juveniles are orange-yellow with vertical white bands. Fish living with the host anemone
Stichodactyla mertensii, Mertens' carpet sea anemone are frequently black except for the snout bars and tail.
Similar species of Amphiprion The caudal fin is forked and the base lacks a white bar on
A. latifasciatus. The caudal fin lacks the sharp demarcation between white and dark and the mid-body bar is narrower on
A. allardi and
A. akindynos. The caudal fin is dark on
A. chrysogaster,
A. fuscocaudatus and
A. tricinctus. ==Distribution and habitat==