H. malu's picture

sad being lost to high temps after all those years. i'm looking at it's pic in 12/95 fama, back then it was a good size in relation to the female onyx perc and the male and clearly my idea of H. crispa. much like my first sebae. interestingly i fed my current sebae yesterday and just measured a 3.25" tentacle today. that is much longer than i'd expect from H. malu. one in the same? hard to say.
i had been thinking that these brown/magenta sebae's may just be young as opposed to what was a 12"+ when collected, bleached and shrunk to 3" by the time it reached the lfs. would explain the rapid growth of those sebae's as opposed to ours.
i'd like to post the pic from the article cited in my last post but don't want to push copyright infringement any more than i already am. suffice to say it looks like a small "crispa" with translucent tentacles. i.e. the tentacle size and shape in relation to the overall size of the anemone. the size at which these animals are found in those waters and size at reproducing is what's puzzling to me. based on photos of H. crispa spawn's i'd of thought crispa wouldn't be sexually mature till larger. but who knows after all we don't even know how long they live.
i came across a few small ~2"-3" translucent yellow tentacle with bright orange columns marked as "sand anemones" at a lfs this past january. i don't think they were dyed. was at "the hidden reef" if anyone here has one please post pics. looked to me like what i expect of H. malu, short tentacles, blotchy colored column and so on, (i've seen small sebae's with the white rings around short tentacles and blotchy yellow/orange lower column which screamed H. malu), was told they came in a shipment from hawaii. a few were dug in the sand, most flip flopped. prob. should've got one if for no other reason than i.d. purposes. called back two days later and was told they sold out. perhaps a sub-species or something else.
unfortunately i haven't been given a grant from exon to classify these animals and can only go on what little information we can gather. this topic has been bought up before on this forum and left unresolved. would be nice if we could better define them.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14603154#post14603154 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by marc price
sad being lost to high temps after all those years. i'm looking at it's pic in 12/95 fama, back then it was a good size in relation to the female onyx perc and the male and clearly my idea of H. crispa. much like my first sebae. .....

I wish I was a better photographer back then. Unfortunately, I'm not any better now. :D

Who's willing to put up some money for DNA testing? Maybe Ms. Fautin can get some funding to put this to rest. :)
 
I tend to agree with phender.............none of the pics above look like Malu's to me.

Some characterics I've seen in mine....

Sparse tentacles towards the center

Tentacles very short /stubby in reference to most nems

Very tight small inverted mouth at all times

Tell tale rings on the tentacle tips

Some pics........
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108_0846.jpg
 
Just an update on my two anemones. They spawned a few years ago. Then my office tank crak and I lost water over the weekend (office tank). The purple one (female) died in this smelly disaster. I was able to safe my clowns and my Green (male)

Here are some picture during the spawn with the female hold the eggs and the sperm from the male.

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Female with developing eggs after the spawn

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Here is the male after I lost the female taken just recently. Needless to say, I am looking for another female

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Picture upload.
I think after keeping this pair for 5 years that I have a male and female H. malu.
 

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