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No idea on ID but is that a weight boat you have them in? They must be sooo tiny! Cool find.Found these nems in clusters around Caspersen Beach, Fl. Anyone have an idea of what they could be?
I’m wondering if it’s a cloak anemone of some sort.
Thanks!
- Aiden
Yup good eye! The largest ones have a pedal disk around an inch in diameter. I'm looking into these nems at my marine lab but cant seem to get a good id. Hopefully someone on here can help before I bother more professors .No idea on ID but is that a weight boat you have them in? They must be sooo tiny! Cool find.
Very cool! What lab are you with?Yup good eye! The largest ones have a pedal disk around an inch in diameter. I'm looking into these nems at my marine lab but cant seem to get a good id. Hopefully someone on here can help before I bother more professors .
I'm pretty sure these aren't Condylactis gigantea, mainly because of their size. We found these anemones attached to a couple of rocks in the sand, and they're all really small, barely over 3 centimeters. That's quite different from the usual 7 to 10 centimeters you'd expect from a Condy. So, considering their size, it doesn't seem like they match up with Condylactis gigantea.Looks like some kind of ball anemone maybe Condylactis gigantea. If that’s the case they are prohibited. If I’m wrong you are still over limit so be careful.
New Orleans is pretty ******! I'm a undergrad research assistant at Florida State University's Coastal and Marine Laboratory under Dr. Tara Stewart Merrill's. Our focus is on marine parasitism and diseases, with a particular emphasis on oyster parasitism. Currently, I'm exploring the interactions between sea anemones, like Aiptasia, and bacterial blooms, such as red tide (caused by dinoflagellates). These nems were collected from a beach experiencing worsening red tide. My project aims to assess their growth patterns in relation to nutrient increases. Im attempting to predict how such anemones might proliferate in the future, especially as red tides continue to nuke fish populations and subsequently enrich the water with nutrients.Very cool! What lab are you with?
Ours in over in New Orleans but we do some work in the FL pan handle.
Bennett Price
My work focuses on the impacts of vessel noise relating to sound production and hearing in several Gulf of Mexico fish species. I will be using field recordings along with in-lab research to...www.fishmorphandbehavior.org
https://tarastewartecology.weebly.com/Very cool! What lab are you with?
Ours in over in New Orleans but we do some work in the FL pan handle.
Bennett Price
My work focuses on the impacts of vessel noise relating to sound production and hearing in several Gulf of Mexico fish species. I will be using field recordings along with in-lab research to...www.fishmorphandbehavior.org
Ball anemone?? No. Balls are mushrooms. These are actual nems.Looks like some kind of ball anemone maybe Condylactis gigantea. If that’s the case they are prohibited. If I’m wrong you are still over limit so be careful.
Yes. True ball anemones not the mushrooms that everyone here misidentifies.Ball anemone?? No. Balls are mushrooms. These are actual nems.
"True ball anemones" are Paracorynatis which are corallimorphs (mushroom corals)
If they have a scientific collection permit they don’t abide by the same collection limits. Being part of a lab I’d assume they have said permits.Condys are called ball anemones here. They are all over the place and usually referred to as ball nems or condys colloquially. Just googled to see if it’s a nomenclature and even the window licking wiki/google editors call them ball anemones. For the sake of this discussion let’s just call them squishy squishy sea boobs. Squishy squishy sea boobs are sexual so they do appear in numbers and very small throughout the year depending on when the last mass spawn was. Even if they/them are not squishy squishy sea boobs, that’s still over limit.
If they have a scientific collection permit they don’t abide by the same collection limits. Being part of a lab I’d assume they have said permits.
Wow- nice score. Likely Florida condylactus which are ornamental. Clowns rarely go into them but domino damsels willFound these nems in clusters around Caspersen Beach, Fl. Anyone have an idea of what they could be?
I’m wondering if it’s a cloak anemone of some sort.
Thanks!
- Aiden
That sounds like great work!New Orleans is pretty ******! I'm a undergrad research assistant at Florida State University's Coastal and Marine Laboratory under Dr. Tara Stewart Merrill's. Our focus is on marine parasitism and diseases, with a particular emphasis on oyster parasitism. Currently, I'm exploring the interactions between sea anemones, like Aiptasia, and bacterial blooms, such as red tide (caused by dinoflagellates). These nems were collected from a beach experiencing worsening red tide. My project aims to assess their growth patterns in relation to nutrient increases. Im attempting to predict how such anemones might proliferate in the future, especially as red tides continue to nuke fish populations and subsequently enrich the water with nutrients.