accidental ritteri?

dantodd

New member
OK, I thought I was buying a BTA (that's what the lfs told me) it was attached underneath a rock and I couldn't tell for sure if it was BTA without bubbles or a ritteri. The base has no verrucae as far as I can tell. The base is a plain tan/brown.

I know that BTA prefer their feet to be under or between rocks and I thought ritteri prefered to put their feet on top of the rock. He was on a pretty rough looking rock along with another similar anemone. I had them peel the other anemone off and sell me the rock with the undisturbed anemone as I figured that would guarantee that his foot wouldn't get ripped. after acclimating him he went into the tank and I placed the rock in with him on the bottom so the he would be in the same position as he was in the LFS.

One reason I was looking for BTA is that the ballast is not lighting the iwasaki very well on that side of the tank and they are a little better in the lower light.

The tank's been up and doing well for a few years. The clarkii and LTA on the other side of the tank are quite happy. Another reason I wanted a BTA is that they aren't as prone to chemical warfare. Though it does look like he might be good at xenia control!

So, is this a ritteri or a non-bubble BTA?

If ritteri what special husbandry should I give it? Took a lancefish and ate it withing 3 hours of being in the tank.

anemoneID.jpg
 
This is where ID gets difficult. My first guess would be a BTA. But, as you may be aware, these animals can "bend" the rules a bit. Both species can and often do things contrary to what they are "supposed" to do. Watch it more for any further behavioral characteristics and hope that that can settle it.
 
once he comes out far enough to get a good shot of his full oral disk it might be easier. He was about 8"+ across at the LFS.
 
Here are a couple more shots. The color is actually much closer to the first pic I posted above than these. I have the tank near a window and it makes it tough to get good shots during the day. Sure does keep the microalgae happy though

big-bta1.jpg

big-bta2.jpg

big-bta3.jpg
 
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