LOL. I still say it's M. doreensis.Look at the verrucae in post #14, then look at the verrucae in post #11. Those are doreensis verrucae. Not crispa verrucae. look how the light shines through the thin delicate tissue of the anemone in the second pic. Light doesn't shine through the thick leathery tissue of crispa like that. Even the way it holds its tentacles makes it look like doreensis.
I hope you're feeding it and acclimating it to bright lights. We need to see this thing once it's happy, healthy, and colorful.
The anemone in this link is H. crispa. Compare the upper collumn of this anemone to the one in this thread. http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl...age=2&ndsp=15&ved=1t:429,r:4,s:13&tx=80&ty=75
And this one I'm pretty convinced is a sebae. So IDK what to think now...
Thanks again, elegance coral, that pic was a huge help for me regardless.
You're welcome.
There is no such thing as a "sebae" anemone. Sebae is a common name given to anemones when people in the trade don't know the actual species. It's typically used for crispa and malu, but I've also seen doreensis, magnifica, and aurora listed as "sebae".
If we rule out doreensis, it still can't be crispa. It simply lacks the leathery tissue and has to few tentacles. If we say it's a Heteractis species, the only option would be malu, not crispa. Just to add to the confusion, we can't rule out hybridization, either.:spin1: :lmao:
Just to keep things interesting.:hmm3: Here's a malu I recently gave away.
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LOL! So now the green one might be a H. Malu, too? It looks a lot like your picture. Ugh...
I can't help with the Id, but I did want to compliment you on the care you are giving it. It looks so much better in your recent photos compared to the original ones you posted back in November. Well done.
Also, congrats on your clown finding it and nice pics of it playing.
Cheers,
K.
If I had to guess, based solely on the pic, I'd say your friend's anemone is H. malu. If it has a skinny little column and pedal disk, then it's malu.