Lineage history

Wyoming White was developed by Sustainable Aquatics, the Tennessee-based captive breeding facility, through a selective breeding program that pushed the iridophore (white pigmentation) genetics to full body coverage. The result is an ocellaris with no traditional clownfish bars - just solid white body with orange face fading.

The name comes from internal naming convention at Sustainable Aquatics. The lineage has been refined over multiple generations and is now one of the most recognized "white" ocellaris designer lineages in the hobby.

Authenticity note: "Wyoming White" specifically refers to the Sustainable Aquatics lineage. Other facilities have produced visually similar fish under different names (Snow Storm, Premium White) but these are distinct lineages with different genetics.

Distinguishing characteristics

  • Body: solid white, no bars or stripes
  • Face: orange to yellow blush around eyes and mouth
  • Fins: white to translucent
  • Eye color: standard ocellaris dark
  • Behavior: classic ocellaris temperament - peaceful, hardy, hosts anemones

Care notes (lineage-specific)

Wyoming White is captive-bred and one of the hardiest designer lineages. They accept dry foods readily, tolerate broader salinity than wild ocellaris, and host anemones reliably. For full ocellaris husbandry parameters, see the parent species page.

Worth noting: the white iridophore concentration can make Wyoming Whites appear translucent in low light. They look their best under blue-leaning reef LED with white pop spectrum (around 8000K).

Pricing benchmarks

  • Single juvenile: $80-150
  • Bonded pair: $200-400
  • Premium graded juvenile: $150-250 (cleaner pigmentation)

Compatibility with similar lineages

  • Snowflake Frostbite: similar pale base with frost pattern accents - good visual contrast
  • Black Ice: dark counterpart - can be paired in display tanks
  • Frostbite: related lineage with frost-pattern markings - sometimes outcrossed

Pairing

Wyoming Whites pair with each other reliably. Larger fish becomes female; smaller stays male. Adding two juveniles of similar size and watching them sort it out is the easiest path. Avoid pairing Wyoming White with non-designer ocellaris - the visual mismatch is jarring.