Carpet Anemone ID Tips

The Velvet Sea

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I've been reading a lot of carpet anemone threads and ID request threads. It seems like a lot of members can ID these on sight. Can anyone please share some pointers, tips, distinguishing features etc. Lots of LFS stock carpets but rarely can they get more specific and so many anemones get listed as "carpets" even Cryptodendrum adhaesivum says "carpet anemone" in the sticky anemone picture thread. Based on the different demands of the different species, knowing which from which before purchase is critical! Thanks in advance.
 
Spots on the underside (verrucae) points to gigantea or mertensii. And Merten's are so seldom seen in the trade it's almost a moot point. Pizza anemones have very short tentacles, very sticky and an outer ring of tentacles that are distinctly different than the ones covering most of the oral disc. The confusion between carpets is usually between haddoni and gigantea. Haddoni don't have colored spots on the column and they generally have shorter tentacles, although a gigantea that isn't settled in and happy can have tentacles that are short too. Haddoni bury their base into the sand, whereas gigantea seems to prefer the rocks.
 
Building on what Gary said...

The easiest is just to look at the column. Haddonis do not have colored verrucae, gigantea have colored verrucae on the upper column, mertensii have colored verrucae on the entire column (particularly the lower half).

Adhaesivum is as Gary describes, and additionally will often have varied colors across the tentacles so that the oral disk looks mottled with color - with the outer rim of tentacles being a different color than the interior ones. Advaesivum is very easy to tell from other carpets because of the tentacles.
 
Are there any telltale features used to ID the Atlantic Carpet, Stichodactyla helianthus? I'd really hate to pick one of these up since they aren't even a host anemone for clowns.
 
Are there any telltale features used to ID the Atlantic Carpet, Stichodactyla helianthus? I'd really hate to pick one of these up since they aren't even a host anemone for clowns.

The difference is more subtle - they can sometimes be mistaken for mertensii.

First, they are brownish in color. I have never seen a colored one (though sometimes the tentacle tips can have spots of color). If you see a colored carpet it is almost certainly NOT a helianthus.

Second, helianthus, though brown/tan, will often have two different colored tentacles (lighter/darker) so that the surface of the anemone looks somewhat checked.

Third, the tentacles of helianthus are fat and stubby. They are considerable fatter than any of the other carpets. Other carpets can often display stubby tentacles (particularly haddonis, but sometimes gigantea and mertensii when stressed), but they are much smaller and look like bulbs packed tightly together.

Fourth, helianthus has dark verricuae that are visible on both upper and lower parts of the column, but they are considerably less numerous than that seen in mertensii. Additionally, the helianthus verrucae are typically brownish colored, while mertensii verrucae are often vibrantly colored.

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Sorry about these photos - they're all I have handy :)
 
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Thanks for the pictures Bonsai. They help a lot!

Funny you mention your other thread, kduen. I read it yesterday and it did a lot to prompt these questions from me.

I'll probably be looking for a haddoni when the time is right, and am still undecided and still in the research phase. It sounds like a lack of distinct contrasting verricuae is the best indicator to go on. I'm confident I could tell the difference based on the tentacles of a healthy system adapted specimen, but I'm sure that is often not the case at many LFS, so checking the verricuae should be more reliable.
 
It sounds like a lack of distinct contrasting verricuae is the best indicator to go on.

Yes. Haddonis HAVE verrucae, they just aren't colored. So you may still see a bumpy texture, particularly just below the oral disk, but no colored spots.

I probably should have pointed out - the first two photos I posted were S. helianthus, followed by S. mertensii, S. gigantea and S. haddoni. Those are pretty obvious examples and why some people can just glance at a carpet and know immediately what they are looking at. The picture of the S. mertensii is a good one because it shows how, when under stress, S. mertensii can display tentacles very similar to S. haddoni - despite the fact that it has the longest tentacles of any carpet anemone. S. gigantea can also show ball tentacles on occasion, while S. haddoni can sometimes show long wavy tentacles. Once settled in and healthy, all carpets return to their most common appearance.
 
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If you look hard enough you can see some of the verrucae on my S. Haddonis

Excellent shots Todd; that's it exactly. Verrucae on haddoni and gigantea are supposed to be mildly adhesive. I have rarely seen them attach to anything in captivity, though occasionally you can see it when they lay open over rock for a while. Verrucae on mertensii are supposed to be much more adhesive.
 
Excellent shots Todd; that's it exactly. Verrucae on haddoni and gigantea are supposed to be mildly adhesive. I have rarely seen them attach to anything in captivity, though occasionally you can see it when they lay open over rock for a while. Verrucae on mertensii are supposed to be much more adhesive.

Thank you.

Shockingly enough, I have noticed that my red Haddoni is fairly adhesive -- I notice it when it starts to fold in on some food -- can notice/see parts of it sticking to the rocks -- sort of like weak velcro.
 
Excellent shots Todd; that's it exactly. Verrucae on haddoni and gigantea are supposed to be mildly adhesive. I have rarely seen them attach to anything in captivity, though occasionally you can see it when they lay open over rock for a while. Verrucae on mertensii are supposed to be much more adhesive.


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my gigantea displays adhesive verrucae sometimes when it's stretching out to get more light.
 
This was extremely helpful to me. I just picked up what I thought was a gigantea that just hadn't settled in, but now I think its a Helianthus... bummer. oh well still looks good its a pretty greenish color and lord is it sticky. it actually stuck to the glass. i might post a picture later for complete confirmation before I decide what to do with it.
 
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