Coloured tube anemone

Cerianthus membranaceus

''Cerianthus membranaceus'', the cylinder anemone or coloured tube anemone, is a species of large, tube-dwelling anemone in the family Cerianthidae. It is native to the Mediterranean Sea and adjoining parts of the northeastern Atlantic Ocean.
Orange Tube Anemone - Cerianthus membranaceus The Orange Tube Anemone - Cerianthus membranaceus is a variety of Tube Anemone with an orange oral disc, a green mouth area and long orange tentacles that reach out well past its body. They are non-photosynthetic (NPS), which means that they do not have the symbiotic algae zooxanthellae hosted within their bodies to provide their nutritional requirements through photosynthesis. Instead the Orange Tube Anemone uses its stinging tentacles to capture plankton and crustaceans from the water column. The tentacles sting the prey and then move the food towards the Anemones mouth. Tube Anemones differ from other species of Anemones in that they do not have a foot or basal sucker, and instead build up a tube made of hardened mucus, sand, rubble and discharge nettle cells. The tube provides the anemone a safe place to retreat to when threatened by predators or while recovering from stressful events. Orange Tube Anemones are hermaphrodites allowing each specimen to produce both eggs and sperm. However, two specimens are required to reproduce as reproduction takes place sexually with one specimen releasing eggs, while the other releases sperm. Anemone,Cebu,Cerianthus membranaceus,Geotagged,Malapascua,Philippines,Spring,Tube Anemone

Appearance

''Cerianthus membranaceus'' is a large, tube-dwelling anemone. The oral disc can have a diameter of up to 40 cm . There are two whorls of tentacles, amounting to about two hundred tentacles in all. Those in the outer whorl are long and slender and armed with cnidocytes and are used for catching prey. Tentacles in the inner whorl are shorter and function to transfer captured food to the central mouth. The tentacles are sometimes banded and come in an array of colours; white, yellow, orange, green, brown, blue, black, purple and violet. The colour of the inner whorl often contrasts with that of the outer whorl.

The column of this tube anemone secretes mucus in which is embedded a unique type of cnidocytes that mesh together to form a fibrous structure. Sand and other particles adhere to this and it forms a leathery, protective tube up to 40 cm in length. There is no pedal attachment and the lower end of the tube is buried in the soft substrate. The tube is open at the base which allows for escape of water when the animal retreats into the tube.
Tube Anemone - Cerianthus membranaceus  Cerianthus membranaceus,Coloured tube anemone,Geotagged,Mabul,Malaysia,Spring

Distribution

''Cerianthus membranaceus'' is found on the seabed in shallow water in the Mediterranean Sea, the northern Adriatic Sea and the northeastern Atlantic Ocean, its range extending as far north as Britain. It occurs on sandy or silty substrates where its tube is buried vertically in the sediment. In the Mediterranean, it principally occurs in areas with high levels of organic matter, such as in zones of pollution off Marseille, where it is present at high densities throughout the year.

Habitat

''Cerianthus membranaceus'' is found on the seabed in shallow water in the Mediterranean Sea, the northern Adriatic Sea and the northeastern Atlantic Ocean, its range extending as far north as Britain. It occurs on sandy or silty substrates where its tube is buried vertically in the sediment. In the Mediterranean, it principally occurs in areas with high levels of organic matter, such as in zones of pollution off Marseille, where it is present at high densities throughout the year.The tentacles of ''Cerianthus membranaceus'' do not retract, but the whole animal can retreat into its tube. As it does so, some of the tentacles grip the rim and pull the tube closed behind it, effectively making it disappear from view. The tube is normally a permanent home, but if the anemone is disturbed from below, as by a burrowing sea urchin, it can eject itself from its tube, move to a new location and secrete a new tube.

''C. membranaceus'' feeds on small fish and planktonic organisms which it catches with its tentacles. It is a protandrous hermaphrodite, starting life as a male and becoming a female later. The gametes are liberated into the sea and after fertilisation, the developing larvae drift with the plankton for a long time before settling on the seabed and undergoing metamorphosis into juvenile polyps.

The tube is used as a refuge by many commensal organisms, especially polychaete worms and shrimps. The horseshoe worm, ''Phoronis australis'', often attaches itself to the outside of the tube. There may be twenty to fifty horseshoe worms associated with one tube anemone.

The lifespan of ''C. membranaceus'' in the wild is not known, but some individuals have been occupants of a tank in Naples Aquarium for more than fifty years.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionCnidaria
ClassAnthozoa
OrderSpirularia
FamilyCerianthidae
GenusCerianthus
SpeciesC. membranaceus