Some clown anemones can have fluorescent pigmentation, and possibly all can. I know for a fact I have seen it on S. mertensii, S. haddoni, S. gigantea, M. doreensis and C. adhaesivum. It is most often separate from their standard pigmentation, so you can, for example, have a purple S. gigantea with secondary green coloration. It is normally heaviest around the mouth and the center of the oral disk - though I have seen some S. haddoni that may have been completely covered:
I have never seen fluorescent pigmentation other than green, though there may be an orange/pink out there. I have seen some BTA's that look like they might glow under UV lighting...
I've never really looked for photos before, but here's some C. adhaesivum that I'll bet would fluoresce under UV lighting. The last one shows the "secondary pigmentation" around the mouth that I often see.
Additionally, now that I think about it, there are some mini-maxis that I have seen with fluorescent pigmentation - including bright orange.
I was having a discussion with a diver who had taken some photos of red S. haddoni on deeper reef slopes. He said there were several types of red haddonis, and he said that there was one coloration that was reddish orange and that "glowed" in the deeper water. His photo is somewhat notorious, because people have questioned whether the coloration is actually true - or whether it is a result of the filters he had on his camera that day. It is certainly possible and I trust this person's description of what he saw.
I saw a photo of what looks (at least to me) like an orange S. mertensii. However the photo was not extensive enough for me to really tell. Pigmentation can be so misleading depending on the camera, the lighting, etc.
Do you still have a mertens? I'd love to see one glowing
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