I've had an established and settled anemone suddenly get up and march directly down the length of an aquarium to do battle with a newly introduced anemone. (Others have had the same experience.)
Three weeks and no noticeable adverse reactions or behavior from either anemone. The Mag has settled in nicely.
View attachment 220524
The gig is lookin good the same.
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EC,
In either case, were there any damage to the anemones? My Gigantea touch the Maxi-mini for months now without any aggression.
I am particularly interested in Magnifica and Gigantea interaction because this is what I want to put together in a system. Were there any in the two pictures above?
EC,
That is one great Video. How long did you have them together, or are you still have them together and that is today video?
The anemones weren't together for long. I kept the mag on a pillar in the center of the tank. I came home from work one day and found the mag next to the gig. I snapped a couple of pic's and made the video, then moved the mag back to its pillar. I don't know how long they were next to each other, but it couldn't have been more than a few hours.
if different species, the purpose is warfareThat is an amazing video. I wouldn't think they could be in contact like that and not hurt each other. If they seek each other out like so many people report, I wonder what the purpose is?
if different species, the purpose is warfare
We all realize anemone warfare can be like watching paint dry (slow!), right?
The development of enzyme secreting glands, mesenterial filaments, acontia filaments, cnidae (spirocysts, ptychocysts and nematocysts) are a result of evolution- not accident. Survival of the fittest!
Why would sessile animals (corals) develop the ability to sting neighbors and inhibit other species from thriving in close proximity to them and not Actiniarians (sea anemones)?
Get out the popcorn: I've seen video of one anemone species eating (!) another and I wonder if you guys have seen that one?
This warfare isn't limited to anemones.
I have some pix somewhere of a Ricordea eating an Aiptasia and I've seen Plerogyra (bubble coral) repel a H. mag with it's very potent stings.
Anemone (and coral) aggression is real and it's happening everywhere these critters exist: the open ocean, dealer's tanks, well filtered reef aquariums etc. etc.