Sea Anemones

Adult (right) and immature Frilled Sea Anemones
Adult (right) and immature
Frilled Sea Anemones

Sea anemones are found from the intertidal zone to extreme depths. Some live attached to solid objects, others burrow in sand or construct tubes. They feed primarily on plankton.

Sea anemones feed through a mouth located in the center of its tentacles. Waste is regurgitated through the same opening. The tentacles sting zooplankton or fish that pass too close, and the anemone swallows its prey whole. Most anemones cannot sting humans with any noticeable effect.

Small anemones may hitch a ride on a hermit crab, an arrangement that is beneficial to both. The crab is protected by the anemone's stingers, and the anemone gains a degree of mobility otherwise impossible.

Anemone anatomy
Anemone anatomy ( say it ten times fast )
young, skinny Frilled Anemones
A group of fairly young, skinny Frilled Anemones. Very young ones have only a single whorl of tentacles, so these would be "teenagers."
Frilled Anemone
A fat, fully mature Frilled Anemone with a well-developed crown. A large adult may have up to a thousand tentacles.

The Frilled Anemone Metridium senile ( above, to 4" ) can be brown, orange, pink, or even white. It resembles a flower when its tentacles are open and extended, but it can retract these tentacles into its center. The frilled anemone can be found in the mid and upper intertidal zones, but it can also be found well below the low tide mark. Its range extends from Delaware north to the Arctic. Its body is divided into three parts: the base or pedal disc, a stalk, and numerous protruding tentacles.

Frilled Anemones
They're not always so attractive. Here is a group of Frilled Anemones all puckered up after being disturbed, perhaps by a photographer.

The Frilled Anemone is the largest and most conspicuous sea anemone in our area, common from subtidal jetty rocks to the deepest shipwrecks. You would need to be in the right place and have a sharp eye to find the rest of the anemones depicted here:

Lined Anemones
Lined Anemones Fagesia lineata ( Edwardsia lineata )

The Lined Anemone is found in numbers great enough to carpet the bottom in places. Its range is from Cape Cod to Cape Hatteras. They live among tubeworms and other growth on and under rocks; from below the low tide line to water more than 70' deep. The young are parasites on Comb Jellies. The burrowing adults grow to 1-1/2 inches.

Lined Anemones growing among sponges
Lined Anemones growing among sponges.
Striped Sea Anemone
Striped Sea Anemone

Striped Sea Anemone

Tiny (1/2") Striped Sea Anemones ( above and right ) are found in rivers and estuaries and other protected areas. They are not native; it is thought that they originate in Japan; they are also found in Europe. Striped Anemones reproduce asexually by budding.

Rather than living on a substrate, Burrowing Anemones ( below ) live in it, burrowing and sometimes constructing tubes in sandy or muddy bottoms, both offshore and in bays and inlets. The buried body of the animal is long and worm-like, and the tentacles are withdrawn deep down into the sediment at the slightest disturbance, much like many fan worms. In fact, fan worms and burrowing anemones are a remarkable example of convergent evolution ( for those who believe in that sort of thing. )

burrowing anemone
A burrowing anemone - probably Cerianthus borealis.
Note the two rows of tentacles.
Herb Segars Photography

light

Photography is all about light. Good lighting is the single most important factor in getting good pictures. After that, technique, experience, and artistic composition are second, and fancy expensive equipment is a distant third.

Unlike photo equipment, light is generally free, during the day anyway. For good results, you usually want to collect as much of it as possible for every picture. This is the job of your camera's lens. The lens is the most important part of a camera, and it is ironic how manufacturers of SLR systems with interchangeable lenses generally sell kits with fancy expensive bodies ( lots of buttons, etc ) and cheap lenses. Even more ironic, much low-end photography is done with disposable cameras that have no lens at all! Whether you use a point-and-shoot, a digital, or an SLR, make sure your camera has a good lens on it. Secondarily, shutter speed also affects your light-collecting ability. Better cameras have controllable shutters, while point-and-shoots are usually fixed at around 1/100 second.

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