🚚 Dry goods ship Australia-wide 🐠 Livestock — buy online, collect in store 🧪 In-store water analysis
Home  /  Fish profiles  /  Frostbite Clownfish
Frostbite Clownfish (Amphiprion ocellaris)

Frostbite Clownfish

Amphiprion ocellaris
Family
Clownfish / Damselfish
Care level
Beginner
Temperament
Peaceful
Reef safe
Reef safe
Max size
8 cm
Min tank
60 L · 16 gal
Origin
Captive-bred (parent species Indo-Pacific)
Diet
Omnivore
Food
Marine pellets, Flake, Mysis, Enriched brine

Overview

The Frostbite Clownfish is a striking designer strain of the everyday Ocellaris Clownfish (Amphiprion ocellaris), created by crossing the 'white' (Wyoming White) and 'snowflake' bloodlines. The result is a mostly clean white body scattered with irregular black spots and blotches — the 'frostbite' look — finished with jagged black fin margins and an orange face mask. Those Dalmatian-like spots darken and become more defined as the fish grows, and the white often takes on a soft frosty-blue hue with age.

Because every spot pattern is different, no two Frostbites are ever quite alike — part of what makes this such a collectable clown.

Crucially, it's always captive-bred, so it brings all the advantages of aquaculture: it's hardy, disease-resistant, already weaned onto prepared foods, and a sustainable choice that never touched a wild reef. Add its peaceful nature and reef-safe credentials and you have a genuine showpiece that's also one of the most beginner-friendly marine fish you can buy.

Compatibility

Ocellaris-type clowns are among the most peaceful clownfish, and the Frostbite is no exception — it settles quickly into community life and generally minds its own business around its chosen patch of reef. Like all clowns it forms a pecking order and can show a little territoriality when pairing or defending a favourite spot, but long-term aggression is uncommon.

Keep it singly or as a bonded pair. If you want two, introduce them together while young; in a pair the larger, dominant fish becomes the female. It mixes well with most peaceful community fish — gobies, blennies, cardinals, chromis, wrasses, tangs and dwarf angels. Avoid aggressive clowns like maroon or tomato clowns, don't mix different clownfish types in one tank, and steer clear of large predators that might see it as a meal. Adding it before more boisterous fish helps it establish itself.

Health & quarantine

As a captive-bred fish, the Frostbite Clownfish is notably hardy and adapts readily to aquarium life — a big part of why it's such a good starter marine fish. Even so, a quiet quarantine period and a slow, unhurried acclimation are worthwhile to confirm strong feeding and rule out any issues before it joins the display. Clownfish can be prone to brooklynella and marine ich when stressed, so stable, well-maintained water and a calm, low-light introduction help. Bought healthy and eating, and kept in clean, consistent conditions, it's a robust fish that commonly lives well into double figures in years.

Frequently asked questions

What exactly is a Frostbite Clownfish?
It's a designer Ocellaris (Amphiprion ocellaris) bred from a mix of the Wyoming White and Snowflake bloodlines. The combination produces a mostly white fish with irregular black 'buckshot' spots and jagged black fin edging — a distinctive look that's captive-bred rather than wild-collected.
Will the pattern change as it grows?
Yes. Frostbites develop with age — the black spots typically darken and become more pronounced, and the white body often takes on a subtle frosty-blue tint. A juvenile's markings are a preview rather than the finished article, and every adult ends up genuinely unique.
Is it good for beginners?
Very much so. Being captive-bred, it's hardy, disease-resistant and already eating prepared foods, so it adapts easily to a stable home aquarium. Just keep water quality consistent and introduce it calmly.
Do I need an anemone?
No. Captive-bred clowns don't require a host anemone and do perfectly well without one, often hosting a coral or rock instead. Only add an anemone once your tank is mature and your lighting and flow can support it — anemones are more demanding than the clown.
Can I keep two Frostbites, or mix it with other clowns?
Best as a bonded pair introduced together while young. Stick to one clownfish pairing per tank and avoid mixing different clownfish types or genera, which invites aggression. Two juveniles added at once is the smoothest path to a bonded pair.
Is it reef safe, and does it need a lid?
It's fully reef safe — it won't harm corals or invertebrates, though it may adopt and fuss over a coral as a surrogate host. And yes, like all clownfish it can jump, so a secure lid or mesh cover is recommended, especially while it's settling in.

Care guidance is drawn from our own experience — every fish is an individual, so treat it as a starting point, not a guarantee. Not sure if a species suits your tank? Come ask us in store. New to the terms? Read the care-terms glossary.