<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8054840#post8054840 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by ezhoops
Phender, OK so I went to the LFS cause they had a purple sebae and wanted to actually see if it was a sebae and I'm 99% sure it was, here is why I think so.
Sebae's typically have short tentacles and have that small dot on the tips of the tentacles. Am I right on this ID? I wasn't able to view either base of these sebae's
Are you asking whether it is an LTA (M. doreensis) or a sebae (either H. crispa or H. malu). If so then yes it sounds like a sebae.
Where on the tentacle might the ring be for the Malu (if they have em)?
The rings go all the way up the tentacles. In SueShe's pic, I wouldn't consider those rings, I would consider them mottlings (if thats a word)
Pictures would be very helpful, I know Jordan (Ron Popelli) has a H. Malu that is exactly what I'm looking for.
And here is the problem. In many areas of the world/country the word Malu is the common name for both species instead of sebae. In fact in recent history both have carried the species name malu but had different genus names. Daphne Fautin wants them seperate. Since she has the most popular book, and most other publications simply borrow her classifications, lets go with her definitions.
H. malu - Often has purple tips on tentacles. Column delicate often pale cream or yellow color, may have splotches of yellow or orange. Tentacles rarely up to 40mm (1.5") long. Maximum diameter of oral disk is 200 mm (~8")
H. crispa - Often has purple tips on tentacles. Column grey with leathery texture, rarely mottled with yellow. Tentacles up to 100mm (4") in length. Oral disk commonly 200 mm but may exceed 500 mm (19")
(Back to my words now) However, we all know that captive indivduals of both species often exibit shortened tentacles due to stress and starvation.
So..... according to Fautin's definition (who as far as I can tell is the only scientist that has one) any "sebae type" anemone that, when healthy, has tentacles that are over 1.5" long and/or is much bigger than 8" across, must be H. crispa. This would make SueShe's husband's anemone and Jordan's (Ron Popeil) anemone H. crispa. (If my assumption as to their size is correct based on the pics I have seen of their two anemones.)
Because of the way anemones react to captivity, the only way I can tell small specimens of the two species apart is if they happen to have bands on the short pudgy tentacles, then I can be reasonably sure that it is H. malu instead of H. crispa.
In my opinion, based on Fautin's definition, most of the "sebae" we see at the LFS are H. crispa that have reabsorbed most of their tentacles.