Jump to content

Strawberry Anemone (also called Club Tipped anemone)


sen5241b

Recommended Posts

I have the Strawberry Anemone (or Club Tipped anemone) growing in my tank. At this point its very small. Anyone had experience with this? According to what I read it can spread --how much, I don't know. It eats copepods. If you say 'destroy' --why?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have the Strawberry Anemone (or Club Tipped anemone) growing in my tank. At this point its very small. Anyone had experience with this? According to what I read it can spread --how much, I don't know. It eats copepods. If you say 'destroy' --why?

 

you have either a tropical Corynactis (not to be confused with Corynactis californica - which is a coldwater species) or a Pseudocorynactis sp. If its Corynactis, it will stay small and slowly spread across the tank, but will pose little to no threat to any livestock like fish or other corals.

 

If it grows larger than say nickel-sized, you have Pseudocorynactis. These guys rarely split, but they'll grow large enough to go after livestock. I've seen them eat fish as big, sometimes bigger than their oral disks.

 

IMO, keep it and see what it turns into. If it gets big enough to threaten livestock, sell it. There are plenty out there who would take it.

 

 

those links are for the coldwater species, not the tropical species.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hey dshnarw, i think i do have Pseudocorynactis sp, and i did have one of them with the white balls on the tips too... Didnt see any of the pink and green ones.. How can you remove them..??

Link to comment
Share on other sites

if you do decide to get rid of them, and are able to do it in a way that keeps them in tact, I would like them please, if it's all right, that is.

Edited by L8 2 RISE
Link to comment
Share on other sites

back of your thumbnail to get under them, or the blunt side of a plastic knife works well for most things. You could also use a razor blade to slice the rock just beneath the anemone, leaving the foot intact with a really thin sliver of rock.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have these in my 24-gallon nano...

 

They are devilishly difficult to photograph. Flash washes them out completely.

 

corynactis2.jpg

 

This group is on a separate small rock, if anyone is really interested:

 

corynactis3.jpg

 

None of mine have very bright colors - but the colors include pink, blue, and green.

 

None of them are over about the size of a nickle.

 

bob

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...