Giant Caribbean sea anemone

Condylactis gigantea

"Condylactis gigantea" is a tropical species of sea anemone that is found in coral reefs and other shallow inshore areas in the Caribbean Sea – more specifically the West Indies – and the western Atlantic Ocean including southern Florida through the Florida Keys.
Condylactis - Giant Anemone Anemone closeup From Tunicate Cove, South Water Caye Marine Reserve, Belize Belize,Condylactis gigantea,Giant Caribbean sea anemone,anemone,macro,marine animals,marine life,tropical,underwater,up-close,upclose

Appearance

A giant Caribbean sea anemone is approximately 15 centimetres high and 30 cm wide, making the disc diameter approximately 40 cm in nature. It is a large, columnar animal and can exhibit a variety of colors: white, light blue, pink, orange, pale red, or light brown. Its mouth is surrounded by 100 or more tentacles. These tentacles differ in each individual of the species and their tips may be purple or rose colored or they even may not have any change in color, becoming paler than the body itself. The whole tentacles are shades of either brown or greenish and the basal disc is firmly attached to the substrate with the only "free–floating" portion being the tentacles.
Giant Anemone, South Water Caye, Belize  Belize,Condylactis gigantea,Dangriga

Behavior

Although the giant Caribbean sea anemone is primarily a sessile animal and has developed some mechanisms of defense and protection, it is quite a mobile species compared to other anemones, and the form of locomotion that it uses is crawling by way of its pedal disc. This movement of crawling is very slow and is not used in defense or in direct protection from predators. Giant Caribbean sea anemones instead reduce their size and draw their tentacles into their gastric cavity; their size is then reduced, and room is made in the gastric cavity by forcing most of the water out and, if their tentacles are not drawn into the gastric cavity, their volume is still reduced greatly. This approach to defense / protection allows for the surface area of these animals to be reduced enough to create less chance of a predator attacking them.

Giant Caribbean sea anemones have another more effective defense in their nematocysts, which are their stinging cells, tubular parts of cnidarian’s capsule–like cells. The tips of the giant Caribbean sea anemones’ tentacles are packed with nematocysts that contain a toxin. When stimulated, the nematocysts explode out of the capsule, impaling the attacker. The toxin is then discharged, causing extreme pain and paralysis.

A giant Caribbean sea anemone is very aggressive towards other marine aquarium invertebrates, and it usually fights to conserve its own space on the ocean floor.
Giant Caribbean Sea Anemone Sep 15, 2017. Seen in Tori's Reef.
I have seen them in most of the other dive sites but more often in the South East dive sites. They always have hosts. I have seen in them arrow crabs, Pederson's shrimps like in here, squat anemone shrimps, little fishes etc. Caribbean Netherlands,Condylactis gigantea,Geotagged,Giant Caribbean sea anemone,Summer

Habitat

The giant Caribbean sea anemone is usually found in the crevices of rock walls, attached to a rock, shell, or almost any other hard object in shallow water that experiences full–strength seawater most of the time, which may explain why the species is so common in Bermuda. Giant Caribbean sea anemones are also very common around reefs in both “forereef” and lagoon areas. It can also be found at most inshore areas, on coral reefs, though this is less common. Sea anemones in general can be found anywhere from the intertidal zone all the way to a depth of 30,000 feet.

"Condylactis gigantea" plays an important role in their subtidal communities by providing shelter to a variety of commensals, and they serve as "base stations" for fish cleaning activity.
Anemone  Caribbean Netherlands,Condylactis gigantea,Geotagged,Giant Caribbean sea anemone,Winter

Reproduction

The giant Caribbean sea anemones' primary mating season is reported to be in late May; however, they may continue to reproduce at a low levels throughout the year. This anemone is generally dioecious but occasionally hermaphroditic. It has a 1:1 to sex ratio with no evidence of brooding or of asexual reproduction or division furrowing.

The giant Caribbean sea anemones’ reproduction scheme has been defined as oviparous → planktonic → lecithotrophic. The releasing or spawning of eggs and sperm are relatively synchronous with fertilization occurring externally in the water column. The success of fertilization depends upon the close proximity of separate sexed anemones. Fertilization produces a planula larva, which derives nutrients from yolk, thus larval death by starvation is unlikely, making dispersal an advantageous strategy to survival. The planula larva will settle on the benthos, develop a pedal disc, and then, eventually grow into a fully developed anemone.
Condylactis gigantea (Actiniidae)  Condylactis gigantea,Geotagged,Giant Caribbean sea anemone,Venezuela,Winter

Food

The giant Caribbean sea anemone is a macrophagous carnivore and feeds upon fish, mussels, shrimp, or any other similar organisms. It will not, however, go near any natural predators, such as red leg hermits.

The anemone's nematocysts help it to capture food as well as defend against predators. Prey are quickly paralyzed by the toxin–bearing nematocysts located on the tentacles; then the prey is quickly carried to the mouth, which is opened by radial muscles in the mesentery, and the prey is eventually swallowed whole and digested extracellularly as well as intracellularly.

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Status: Unknown
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionCnidaria
ClassAnthozoa
OrderActiniaria
FamilyActiniidae
GenusCondylactis
Species