carpet in the wild

burnah

New member
took this in bali while diving on pemuteran house reef:
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is it a haddoni? what kind of clowns are hosted here and are these cardinal fishes that stay close to it? i saw these small shiny fish in the surroundings of many different anemones...

greetings
 
That's a haddoni for sure. Man it's humongous!!!
Aside from Percula and Occelaris, I'm not very good at clown ID.
 
well the image seems to make it look larger than it actually was. all clownfish pictured are juvenile, the carpet itself was about the size of a large pizza plate if that helps picturing it.
 
I'm fairly certain those aren't A. clarkii, they look to be A. polymnus.

burnah, do you remember anything distinctive about the clowns patterns, did they have three or two bars, was the second bar straight up and down or at an angle, was the tail yellow or black (looks yellow on the juvy, and black on the sub-adult)?
 
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ok from these pictures they could also be saddleback clowns as they lack the last stripe and have a black tail, at least on the topdown pic. i would say in the very first picture you see a very small (<1cm)juvenile clarkii or a similar species and 2 juvenile a.polymnus with one adult hiding in the far background.
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i uploaded more pictures of this anemone as well as some more photos i took of anemones, but these are unedited neither for whitebalance nor cropped or enhanced and also shot with less skill then the above so sorry for the quality.

i spotted a gigantea with clarkiis too?
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entacmea quadricolor with tomatos and clarkiis? or are these sebae? this was a rock completely covered in a tan BTA the size of a sofa:
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and heteractis crispa too.
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magnifica with ocellaris? or crispa?
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Cryptodendrum adhaesivum(or is this heteractis aurora?) with clarkiis, and one with commensal shrimps, although they are very hard to see (and to photograph unless with a good macro lens)
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i suspect this is a stychodactyla mertensii
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with this clowns:
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magnifica
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took this in bali while diving on pemuteran house reef:
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is it a haddoni? what kind of clowns are hosted here and are these cardinal fishes that stay close to it? i saw these small shiny fish in the surroundings of many different anemones...

greetings

Very nice haddoni! How deep is that? Shallow or deep!?!
 
Very nice haddoni! How deep is that? Shallow or deep!?!

it was in about 5 meters depth on the righthand side of a reef on a sandy slope. i think also important to mention that beyond its spot the water started to become cloudy from the waves on the beach. it was solitary on the sand bed, although not visible wether buried in the sand or attached to a submersed rock.
quite next to it was the rope of a buoy that showed the start of a reef project where they glued corals to metal cages set under current.
 
That carpet anemone with the red verrucae looks like mertensii. And that is H. aurora, not C. adhaesivum. Beautiful pics, btw. Boy, I'd love to dive there.
 
I noticed in the pics all the crispa were in the rocks, was that where you saw all of them or did you see some crispa buried in the sand. Also, what depth did you find the magnifica and the crispas?
 
thank you for the ids. the crispas only once touched sand. most were in rather shallow water, max depth 5m and attached to the artificial structures some biologists dumped in the water over there which are used to support the regrowth of the reef. they got lots of light even in the evening hours and lots of water movement

the crispa i labelled as magnifica however was in a deeper part of another reef, you can see the difference in its look, more spread where the others where more compact and upright, these were also the ones that hosted ocellaris.

are you sure about the one with the red verrucae, i thought this was a sign of s.gigantea. was i right about the very huge carpet with the more spaced long tentacles to be a mertensii? i agree on the aurora but what is the anemone with the commensal shrimps, is it a c.adhaesivum?

i find it amazing that all these species live there and yet even one species looks and behaves totally different.

are these all crispas?
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(plus aurora)
 
entacmea quadricolor with tomatos and clarkiis? or are these sebae? this was a rock completely covered in a tan BTA the size of a sofa:
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A. melanopus and A. clarkii. And your additional pics confirmed that those are A. polymnus in the S. haddoni.
 
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