Anemonie ID

B192734

New member
Hey all. Just wondering if anyone out thee can ID something for me. I don't have a picture of it at the moment, but I can probably get one. It's an anemone that is about 2 1/2 inches across, and it's white with long arms and little purple dots at the end of each one. Any clues with the small amount of info I can provide at this moment?
 
Does it look like this?
hli_uw8_std.jpg
 
Essentially. This one looks like it's little purple tips are more pronounced, but for the most part it looks about the same.
 
Hmm. lThe only other anemone I can think of that is white and has purple tips is the condylactus above or the sebae which is the one below. We better wait for the experts, because there may be more purple tipped anemones that I don't know about and I don't want to lead you astray since I am new myself. ;)
sabae.jpg
 
Really need pic of foot/base for proper ID.
Diff nems have diff requirements, so make sure to ID b4 purchase.
Why doesn't seller know?
BTW, that sebae in pic is bleached, white nems usually are.
Maybe give tank specs as well for better advice.
 
It actually looks like it's the Condylactus above. My wife thought that it would be a good present to come home with since my tank needs new occupants. It crashed due to a faulty heater about 3 months ago, and I've gotten it back into shape, but there's nothing but a Percula and a Yellowtail Damsel (the standard original). There's a couple of polyps that are starting to make a comeback but that's it. Water parameters are really good. It's a pretty mature tank that has never had problems. I have a skimmer and a cannister filter and that gives a good amount of water movement, and everything stays very stable. 15-20% water changes religiously every weekend, and it gets topped off everyday and tested about every 2 days. The only inhabitants that I've lost ever are due to the heater. So water is pretty good.
 
Some may, but chances are pretty good that the clowns will end up being eaten by it at some point. They can also stress the anemone to death, as the species is not adapted to inhabitants.
 
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