ID please?

Shila Marie

New member
Got this nem at a discounted price from the lfs. Ive been getting different names on what type it is. Can someone please help? I am new to nems
Thanks in advance :)
 

Attachments

  • 0616152006.jpg
    0616152006.jpg
    55.9 KB · Views: 0
  • 0616152006b.jpg
    0616152006b.jpg
    50.1 KB · Views: 2
They said it was a zebra nem. Obviously not lol they said it was almost dead and didn't think it would make it. I got it for $13 even. Ill try to get a good pic of its foot and bottom hlf of it tomorrow. I have had people tell me its a condy or a long tentacle
 
Got a few quick pics. It burys its foot in rock crevices or under another coral.... moves around alot still but it pretty much stays in the center/bottom of the tank on the rock. Never seen it in the sand yet
 

Attachments

  • 0617152207.jpg
    0617152207.jpg
    36.4 KB · Views: 2
  • 0617152206a.jpg
    0617152206a.jpg
    42 KB · Views: 1
  • 0617152206.jpg
    0617152206.jpg
    31.7 KB · Views: 2
Looks to me like a Heteractis Malu. If that's the case they tend to prefer sandy substrate, so try putting in in the sand.
 
I would say the tentacles are too long and too thick and blunt for a malu. They also lack the purple tips that malu tentacles in general have.
I looks much more like condylactis.
 
My guess of Malu is based on this description:

Details Tentacles arise from brown or purplish (rarely bright green) oral disc as much as 200 mm in diameter that may have white radial markings; evenly tapered to point or slightly inflated in middle; lower part same colour as oral disc, but upper portion may have several white rings or green end. Column very thin in expansion; upper part violet-brown (due to zooxanthellae) with longitudinal rows of adhesive verrucae. Anemones can retract completely into sediment; most common in shallow, quiet waters.

Source: http://jjgeisler.com/reeftank/anemones/ch1.htm
 
My guess of Malu is based on this description:

"Details Tentacles arise from brown or purplish (rarely bright green) oral disc as much as 200 mm in diameter that may have white radial markings; evenly tapered to point or slightly inflated in middle; lower part same colour as oral disc, but upper portion may have several white rings or green end. Column very thin in expansion; upper part violet-brown (due to zooxanthellae) with longitudinal rows of adhesive verrucae. Anemones can retract completely into sediment; most common in shallow, quiet waters."

Source: http://jjgeisler.com/reeftank/anemones/ch1.htm
It doesn't fit that description. The tentacles are too thick to begin with and then evenly thick and too long. A malu of that size would have proportionally shorter tentacles.
On top of that, a unhappy or sick malu retracts its tentacles.

Also this one seems to be very fragile. A malu has more the consistency of a crispa - very leathery.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top