Sebae anemone

Heteractis crispa

The Sebae anemone, also known as leathery sea anemone, long tentacle anemone or purple tip anemone, is a species of sea anemone belonging to the Stichodactylidae family native from the Indo-Pacific area.
Sebae Anemone (Heteractis crispa) Kapal Indah. Lembeh. Geotagged,Heteractis crispa,Indonesia,Sebae anemone,Spring

Appearance

The sebae anemone is characterized by a flared oral disc which reaches between 20 and 50 cm in diameter and with multiple and long tentacles measuring 10 to 15 cm. These tentacles have rounded tip and the end is often colored with a purple or blue spot. The column, external structure of an anemone visible when the animal is closed, is gray in color and dotted with sticky whitish "warts". The sea anemone, being member of the Hexacorallia, usually carries a number of tentacles multiple of six and they are positioned in concentric circles. These are light beige to purple.
Sebae Anemone (Heteractis crispa) Batu Lubang Besar, Lembeh. Geotagged,Heteractis crispa,Indonesia,Sebae anemone,Spring

Distribution

The sebae anemone is widespread throughout the tropical and subtropical waters of the Indo-Pacific area from the eastern coasts of Africa, Red Sea included, to Polynesia and from south Japan to Australia and New-Caledonia.

This sea anemone likes hard base substrates slightly covered with sand but it can also cling to branching corals from the surface to 40 meters deep.
Sebae anemone - Heteractis crispa Different species. Is the one with long gray tentacles. The others on the sides are Sarcophyton corals, at least the one on the left. Fall,Geotagged,Heteractis crispa,Indonesia,Sebae anemone

Behavior

The sebae anemone has two ways to feed. The first one is through the inside via photosynthesis of its symbiotic hosts zooxanthellae, living in its tissues. And the second one is through a normal way by capturing its preys via its tentacles that allow it to immobilize its prey .

Its reproduction can be sexual by simultaneous transmission of male and female gametes in the water or asexual by scissiparity; the anemone divides itself into two separate individuals from the foot or the mouth.

The relationship between anemonefish and their host sea anemones is highly nested in structure. With 15 species of hosted anemonefish, the sebae anemone is highly generalist, and mostly hosts generalist anemonefish. ''A. latezonatus'', the wide-band anemonefish, is a specialist only hosted by ''H. crispa''.. In the Red Sea, it is considered a nursery anemone as sexually mature fish are rarely hosted by ''H. crispa''. A study in the northern Red Sea found anemone density affected whether ''H. crispa'' hosted anemonefish, with clusters of juvenile fish only found at low-density sites, while either one or no juvenile anemonefish were found in ''H. crispa'' at the high-density site. The authors theorised that ''H. crispa'' was a nursery anemone due to being unable to adequately protect adult anemonefish from predation, active emigration of fish to ''Entacmaea quadricolor'' and/or environmentally controlled cessation of fish growth. Why this would be so in the Red Sea is not clear, when in the western Pacific, adult pairs are found in individuals of ''H. crispa''.

The anemone fish hosted by the sebae anemone are:

⤷ ''Amphiprion akindynos
⤷ ''A. barberi''
⤷ ''A. bicinctus''
⤷ ''A. chrysopterus''
⤷ ''A. clarkii''
⤷ ''A. ephippium''
⤷ ''A. latezonatus''
⤷ ''A. leucokranos''
⤷ ''A. melanopus''
⤷ ''A. omanensis''
⤷ ''A. percula''
⤷ ''A. perideraion''
⤷ ''A. polymnus''
⤷ ''A. sandaracinos''
⤷  ''A. thiellei''
⤷ ''A. tricinctus''

Juveniles of ''Dascyllus trimaculatus'' are also associated with ''H. crispa''.
Sebae Anemone (Radianthus lobatus) Monument, Lembeh. Night dive. Geotagged,Heteractis crispa,Indonesia,Sebae anemone,Spring

Habitat

The sebae anemone is widespread throughout the tropical and subtropical waters of the Indo-Pacific area from the eastern coasts of Africa, Red Sea included, to Polynesia and from south Japan to Australia and New-Caledonia.

This sea anemone likes hard base substrates slightly covered with sand but it can also cling to branching corals from the surface to 40 meters deep.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionCnidaria
ClassAnthozoa
OrderActiniaria
FamilyStichodactylidae
GenusHeteractis
SpeciesH. crispa
Photographed in
Indonesia