Sea Anemones
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class:
Anthozoa
Order: Actiniaria
A sea anemone usually attaches itself to
rocks or coral. They have a central mouth which is surrounded by tentacles with
nematocysts, stinging cells that paralyze and entangle small marine
animals. Sea anemones primarily reproduce sexually: most often, their eggs are
fertilized in the gastric cavity, and then their young are released
through the mouth temporarily as free-swimming larvae--they soon find somewhere
to attach themselves to. A few sea anemones have symbiotic relationships with
some hermit crabs; they attach themselves on the shell of the hermit crab (or
they are attached by the hermit crab). There are theories that this is
beneficial to the hermit crab for protection since the stinging cells on certain
sea anemones can be quite potent, and the sea anemone may benefit from scraps of
the hermit crab's food that it did not eat. They are the relatives of corals and sea fans.
They exist only in the polyp stage and obtain their food by filter
feeding.
Common Name: Crimson anemone; Scientific Name:
Cribrinopsis fernaldi
Facts: Reaching large sizes of about 18
in, the color of this anemone can range from red to pale yellow or white. It is
found in many different habitats in both high and low current.