Do anemones have taste buds?

Moort82

New member
Odd question i know but i read an article on mandarins which mentioned they were possibly poisonous (although it mentioned this hadn't yet been proved). It also talked about the mucus which i think is well know to be a deterent to predators by tasting foul.
Now i have heard many a person who has had an anemone thats taken a mandarin. That basically explains my question. Do they, unlike other predators not mind the mucus coating, or just don't recognise it as a deterent?
A similar question arises with things like sea urchins or lionfish, which i've also heard have been taken by anemones.

TIA
 
Interesting question. They can definitely sense food in the water, as mine will sometimes "pucker" when I feed the clownfish. I don't know enough about anemone anatomy (say that three times fast!) to say whether it's some rudimentary sense of smell or taste, or something else. I hope somebody more scientifically minded than me can shed some light on the subject.
 
I agree that its likely they have sensuary recognition as when they are fed they really hold on but if algae or non food items touch the tentacles, there is a very different reaction.
It also made me think that it mandarins have a thick mucus coating, wouldn't that make them more resistant to the stings in the first place? but again they don't seem to have much of a defence against them.
 
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