This video is amazing! So many leuc's!

Cool video.. how did you find it?

Looks like there are multiple anemones there, not just one as the title implies..
 
Yellow tail blue stripes, some kind of skunk, and one even looks like tomatoe

Looks to me like clarki (don't look like chysopterus to me), pink skunk, orange skunk (in the front), leucs and a tomato in the back (maybe in its own anemone). So I think he sold himself one species short. :)

I've never seen any pics of that many leucs together either.

I wonder if there is an anemone occupied by clarkis nearby. The two little clarkis look like they may be satellite juvis from a nearby anemone, since they are not really being accepted into the leuc anemone.

Great video! Thanks
 
Looks to me like clarki (don't look like chysopterus to me), pink skunk, orange skunk (in the front), leucs and a tomato in the back (maybe in its own anemone). So I think he sold himself one species short. :)

I've never seen any pics of that many leucs together either.

I wonder if there is an anemone occupied by clarkis nearby. The two little clarkis look like they may be satellite juvis from a nearby anemone, since they are not really being accepted into the leuc anemone.

Great video! Thanks

Glad you appreciated it.
 
My MP10 does that in my tank for my mags.

A TUnze wavebox can do this too.

Yeah I realize it can be done but at a much higher frequency than what we see in the ocean but to get that slow transition back and forth is really difficult to replicate with our captive small bodies of water. I have yet to see any such device that comes close to generating a truly accurate depiction of what you see in that video or just about any wild videos for that matter.
 
Cool video. I wish it was a little longer though. I've watched it more than a dozen times.LOL I've never seen a colony of crispa like that, which leads me to believe they're actually magnifica. Kinda strange positioning for magnifica though.
 
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