D-Nak
Active member
99% sure it's a gigantea. But as others mentioned, we'll need to see the column for possible confirmation.
This is based on a few assumptions (generalizations):
1. Gigantea mouths are frequently yellow, and the mouth appears yellow on this anemone. Many mertensii have the same color mouth as the rest of the oral disk.
2. In terms of verrucae color, of all of gigantea and mertensii I've seen, when described as purple verrucae, gigantea verrucae are typically violet purple while mertensii are reddish purple, more towards maroon. In other words, gigantea verrucae color range from blue to purple, while mertensii range from purple to orange, almost as if one takes over where the other left off.
3. Tentacle length in the photo seems long for an acclimating mertensii. Most I've seen are extremely short, resembling a haddoni. In this case, because the tentacles are so long, I'm guessing it's an acclimating gigantea.
Again, these are all generalizations. I'm sure there are oddballs as with almost everything reef-related, so the only way to know for sure is to see brightly colored verrucae that are maroon to orange.
This is based on a few assumptions (generalizations):
1. Gigantea mouths are frequently yellow, and the mouth appears yellow on this anemone. Many mertensii have the same color mouth as the rest of the oral disk.
2. In terms of verrucae color, of all of gigantea and mertensii I've seen, when described as purple verrucae, gigantea verrucae are typically violet purple while mertensii are reddish purple, more towards maroon. In other words, gigantea verrucae color range from blue to purple, while mertensii range from purple to orange, almost as if one takes over where the other left off.
3. Tentacle length in the photo seems long for an acclimating mertensii. Most I've seen are extremely short, resembling a haddoni. In this case, because the tentacles are so long, I'm guessing it's an acclimating gigantea.
Again, these are all generalizations. I'm sure there are oddballs as with almost everything reef-related, so the only way to know for sure is to see brightly colored verrucae that are maroon to orange.