This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts. Clown fish have surged in popularity as pets ever since the movie ...
Nemo may have found his way to theaters for a 3D sequel to Disney-Pixar’s “Fidning Nemo” franchise, but the real-life fish, the Orange Clownfish, is endangered and could possibly become extinct.
It turns out the fish from Pixar's Finding Nemo are pretty hard to find — and costly, too. However, researchers at the University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) are ...
One of the summer's most anticipated films, "Finding Dory," could make waves outside the movie theater. Some scientists fear the movie may increase the removal of wild clownfish like Nemo or blue ...
Researchers say the feisty, territorial fish tell between threatening intruders and innocuous cohabitants by counting the stripes across their bodies. Scientists tested the orange fish to gauge their ...
Finding the message of many films can be challenging, but the moral of Finding Nemo seems pretty straightforward: Leave fish in the ocean, where they belong. In the children's movie, the father of a ...
With fish driven insane by life in aquariums and mad plans to escape to the ocean via a toilet flush, the message behind Finding Nemo is decisively that fish shouldn’t be taken off the reef and into ...
Clownfish, the orange-, black- and white-striped fish made famous in the movie "Finding Nemo," are a gossipy bunch, popping and clicking amid their anemone homes to defend and reinforce their social ...