If you are looking for scientific reasons such as clades of zoanthellae, look at the November/December 2011 issue of coral magazine, they have a good article. It dels mostly with corals, but the same can be true with any photosynthetic creature
The colors on the surface of the anemone can change from tank to tank, depending on lighting and conditions. But I don't think you can inject algae from RBTA into a GBTA (for example) and have it start showing red all of a sudden. I believe the color range is predetermined by the parent anemone that the BTA split from, or the parents of the anemone if it came from sexual reproduction.
because i inherited a bleached BTA and im fixing him up. hes snow white no color at all but feeding on a normal schedule. i also have a RBTA that just split. and i read that it will help the bleached nem to regain its algae i think it would be a little boring to have 3 RTBA's so if color were determined say by the algae culture inside then maybe i could get a sample from a green BTA and expose it???
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