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Brown Sea Anemone

Metridium senile (Linnaeus 1761)

Brief Summary

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The plumose anemone is a rather tall sea anemone, with many thin tentacles on the top of the column. The column has an erected edge at the top. This makes the anemone look like a turtleneck collar topped off with a wig. Plumose anemones live in groups, up to 500 specimen per square meter. The entire group displays the same color, which isn't so strange if you realize that sea anemones can clone themselves. So the group is often one big family.
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Metridium senile

provided by wikipedia EN

Metridium senile, or frilled anemone, is a species of sea anemone in the family Metridiidae. As a member of the genus Metridium, it is a type of plumose anemone and is found in the seas off north-western Europe and both the east and west coasts of North America.

Description

A view of the interior of a frilled anemone at Maria Mitchell Aquarium on Nantucket; notice the tentacles surrounding the central mouth.

The base of Metridium senile is considerably wider than the column and is attached to rock or another substrate. The column is long, smooth and cylindrical, of a fleshy consistency with a slimy surface lubricated with mucus. There are no warts or suckers and the column is topped by a parapet and deep groove. The oral disc is broad and deeply lobed into several curving sections that overhang the column. The slender, pointed tentacles are very numerous in larger specimens though fewer and relatively longer in smaller ones. Those near the margin are crowded and short whereas further into the disc they are longer and more dispersed. The colour range of this sea anemone is large but for any one specimen the colour is uniform throughout, except for the orange-red lip surrounding the central mouth. Colours include, white, cream, pink, orange, red, grey, brown and olive-green. The tentacles are translucent but may have a white band, and some specimens have a darker column and much paler disc.[2][3]

There are several distinct forms and various intermediate ones. M. senile var. dianthus is described above. It has over 1000 tentacles and exhibits a feathery appearance. It can grow to 30 cm (12 in) tall with a base diameter of 15 cm (6 in) and a similar tentacle span. M. senile var. pallidus is much smaller, seldom exceeding 2.5 cm (1 in) base diameter, and has a much less convoluted disc with fewer than 200 tentacles. It seems to be a dwarf race, becoming sexually mature while still small.[4] There are also a number of intermediate forms.[3]

Johannes Peter Müller has described the variety dianthus as "the most beautiful of all the anemones".[2] It is indeed an impressive sight with the tentacles fully expanded, resembling a palm tree, but when retracted it can become a low, irregularly shaped, jelly-like disc of unattractive appearance.[2] When exposed to the air by a retreating tide, it does not always retract but may hang under an overhang in a limp fashion looking like a wet glove with a single drop of water dangling at its tip.[2]

Distribution

M. senile is found on the northwest coasts of Europe from the Bay of Biscay north to Norway and Iceland.[3] It also occurs on the east and west coasts of North America and has arrived in South African waters.[1] It is found on the lower shore and the neritic zone at depths down to about 100 m (328 ft).[3]

Habitat

M. senile adheres to rocks, boulders, man-made structures, pebbles and shells. It favours places where the current is strong. Smaller forms inhabit the lower shore where they are found under stones, beneath overhangs and in shaded places. It specially favours soft rocks, honeycombed by molluscs, and the underside of large boulders. At greater depths, the larger forms are sometimes abundant on pilings, submerged pipes, pier supports and harbour walls.[3] In the English Channel the anemones are often brought up when trawling in shallow waters for oysters and scallops. One oyster was found to have twenty anemones crowded onto its shell.[2]

Biology

M. senile is a predator and catches small organisms floating past in the current. Its diet largely consists of copepods, worm larvae, mollusc larvae, ascidian larvae, amphipods and barnacle larvae.[5] There are reports of the sea anemone itself being eaten by the sea slug Aeolidia papillosa ("shag rug nudibranch"), the sea spider, Pycnogonum littorale, wentletrap sea snails Epitonium spp., the flounder, Pseudopleuronectes americanus and the black bream, Spondyliosoma cantharus.[5]

M. senile is a protandric hermaphrodite[1] – it starts life as a male and changes to be female when it gets older. Eggs or sperm develop in the gonads embedded in the mesentery that lines the coelom. They are ejected through the mouth, and when fertilised develop into planula larvae. After one to six months drifting in the plankton,[5] these settle and metamorphose into juveniles. By this means the plume anemone can spread to new areas some way from its origins.[6]

The plume anemone can also increase its numbers by asexual reproduction. An individual can undergo binary fission by splitting in half and growing into two organisms. Or it can develop buds which grow into new individuals before becoming detached. Fragmentation, also known as basal laceration, is another mechanism by which the number of individuals can be increased rapidly. In an aquarium, the anemone can sometimes be seen to glide across a hard surface such as the glass wall, leaving fragments behind in the process. After a week or more, each piece can be seen to be developing a disc and tentacles and in due course grows into a new individual.[2]

In 1856, in Torbay, England, a waterlogged board was brought to the surface by a dredger. It was found to have over 400 individuals of M. senile of varying sizes living on it. Those on one side were all white while the other side housed only individuals that were orange. The naturalist Philip Henry Gosse, writing about this, surmised that each side housed individuals resulting from the fragmentation of a single original individual that had settled on the board.[2]

The growth rate of this species is rapid. Juveniles have been found to increase the diameter of their bases by 0.6 to 0.8 mm per day. By the age of 5 months, they have been found to reach an average basal diameter of 45 mm (2 in).[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c Metridium senile (Linnaeus, 1761) World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2018-08-02.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Goose, P., H. (1860). A history of the British sea-anemones and corals. London, Van Voorst. page 12-24.
  3. ^ a b c d e Metridium senile Marine Species Identification Portal. Retrieved 2011-09-05.
  4. ^ Rawlinson, R., (1934). A comparative study of Metridium senile (L.) var. dianthus (Ellis) and a dwarf variety of this species occurring in the river Mersey, with a discussion on the systematic position of the genus Metridium. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the U.K. 19: 901-919.
  5. ^ a b c Metridium senile Biotic: Biological Traits Information Catalogue. Retrieved 2011-09-05.
  6. ^ Reproduction in the Floating Dock Habitat Retrieved 2011-09-05.
  7. ^ Bucklin, A. (1987). "Growth and asexual reproduction of the sea anemone Metridium: Comparative laboratory studies of three species". Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 110: 41–52. doi:10.1016/0022-0981(87)90065-7.
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Metridium senile: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Metridium senile, or frilled anemone, is a species of sea anemone in the family Metridiidae. As a member of the genus Metridium, it is a type of plumose anemone and is found in the seas off north-western Europe and both the east and west coasts of North America.

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Diet

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Generally, anthozoans are primarly carnivorous which prey on sea urchins, gastropods, bivalves, or crustaceans that crawl or swim into their grasp.

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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Distribution

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circumarctic boreal to New Jersey

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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Habitat

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sandy, muddy, or rocky habitats; also may attached themselves to hard parts or products of other organisms (shells)

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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Habitat

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Known from seamounts and knolls

Reference

Stocks, K. 2009. Seamounts Online: an online information system for seamount biology. Version 2009-1. World Wide Web electronic publication.

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Habitat

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coastal to shelf

Reference

van der Land, J. (ed). (2008). UNESCO-IOC Register of Marine Organisms (URMO).

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Jacob van der Land [email]