FAQs on Sebae, Heteractis crispa Anemone
Social Health/Disease
FAQs on Sebae Anemone Disease:
Sebae Disease 1,
Sebae Anemone Health 2,
Sebae Anemone Disease 3
FAQs on Sebae Anemone Disease by Category:
Diagnosing,
Environmental (Pollution/Poisoning, Lighting...),
Nutritional,,
Trauma,
Pathogenic (Infectious, Parasitic, Viral)
Predatory/Pest,
Treatments
Related Articles: Heteractis
crispa/Sebae Anemones, Bubble
Tip Anemones, Anemones,
Cnidarians, Colored/Dyed Anemones, Related FAQs:
Sebae
Anemones 1, Sebae Anemones 2,
Sebae Anemones 3, Sebae Identification, Sebae Behavior, Sebae Compatibility, Sebae Selection, Sebae Systems, Sebae Feeding, Sebae Reproduction,
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Usual issues: Allelopathy w/ other Cnidarians (including
anemones, own species even); mean fishes (puffers, angels et al.),
crabs, some shrimps, hermits...
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New Print and
eBook on Amazon:
Anemone Success
Doing what it takes to keep Anemones healthy long-term
by Robert (Bob) Fenner
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Sebae Health
2/3/16
Ok have a 220 reef I have had this set up since 10-07-15. 1
Sebae which has thrived up until lately.
<Clown, anemone?>
A couple of months ago I introduced a rose bubble tip which within 30 days
split. The sisters are doing great. So is a large Toadstool coral a
few very small stony's way up in the rock work, some Zoos,
<The Sarcophyton and Zoanthids don't play well w/ other Cnidarian groups. >
IF there is some sort of physical, chemical challenge in the system there could
be real trouble here>
feather dusters and 13 small fish, 300lbs of live rock, 40 gallon sump/refugium
and 3 Kessil 360 W lights. Water parameters are great. Run big Skimmer plenty of
flow with double overflows and Tunze Wave Box.
The Sebae a bout 3 weeks ago started to get smaller at times
<Oh, so, Heteractis crispa>
so I started feeding a couple of times a week with Silversides
>See WWM re feeding this species<
only about the size of the mouth. Fed the bubbles at same time too and they look
great but the Sebae wants to sometimes completely shrink up and go into the sand
briefly which never worried me but it seems to be more inflated in the morning
and evening hours or in darkness. At peak lighting times it's smaller and not
extended as much. It does host an anemone crab
but has for 90 days at least. It is about 22 inches from a bubble tip and maybe
10 inches from the Toadstool coral which is very healthy.
I do water changes about every 3-4 weeks and do 3+ gallons.
<What volume is this?>
Everything looks great except the Sebae not as prolific as it should although
color is very fine so I now it can't be the lights and it is not moving at all
maybe 5 inches on a lateral move over 3 months but never came up out of the sand
just got more focused under the light I think.
<Please, please read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/SebAnemDisDiagF.htm and the linked files
above....>
I figure maybe not thriving due to chemical warfare or maybe I should back off
the feedings.
<You should READ>
Comments? I know I pushed the envelope on the cycling but took it very easy on
the bio-load with tons of live rock sand seeding and skimming nothing was
stressed. The Sebae and 2 banded corals went in at 30 days after setup and never
showed signs of stress
Thanks in advance
Mike Murphy
<Enjoy the reading. Write back w/ specific questions, concerns (should you have
them), after. Bob Fenner>
RE: Sebae Health
2/3/16
Sorry meant to say 30+ gallons on water change
<Ah; that makes more sense. B>
Re: Sebae Health... more incompatible tankmates
2/5/16
OK. I've already read all of the suggested reading prior to posting.
<//// ? then why are you feeding silversides? Go back and re-read>
The only thing I have not tried is force feeding the Crispa with a dropper and
vitamin soaked mysis shrimp as a treat as it has been accepting
silversides all along.
<I like popcorn too... but not good for me to eat it exclusively>
Coloration is still very good but during day at peak lighting times it is
shrunken and tentacles are deflated somewhat until my LED controller starts o
diminish intensity around 4-4:30 pm. At this time the tentacles tend to inflate
more and more so into the darkness hours. The oral disc remains normal I
appearance and it is still buried well in the sand. If these new Kessil 360's
can keep stony corals and the other soft corals and anemones in good health they
should do the same for this specimen.
<Agreed>
I have a well-established 55 gallon with live rock, led's macro algae and a pair
of Maroon clowns that I am contemplating moving the crispa to in hopes that no
other Cnidarians will be there to wage any chemical war fare and will recover.
<Good>
It has been thriving for 3 months until now and nothing in the water parameters
are out of line and all other specimens are fine i.e.. 2 bubble tip,
toadstool , Torch coral, 2 small carpet anemones
<!? NOT compatible. SEE/READ on WWM re>
and a small rock anemone so maybe someone is not playing well .
I did clean my skimmer out as the fractionizing tube was dirty and it was not
effective but with all the macro and live rock for the short period of time
should not have hurt anything as even when at 100% it does not take a heavy
amount of wastes out.
Maybe I should give him another 24 before moving?
<I'd move it stat! Bob Fenner>
RE: Sebae Health 2/5/16
On the silversides issue maybe I'm missing something? I see several
recommendations that is a good source only maybe soaked in Selcon.
<...."ideal foods are very finely minced meaty foods of marine origin Mysids,
shrimp, krill, etc. Please do research more about this anemone in the FAQs and
articles on this our site www.wetwebmedia.com">
I did start using RO water from a filtration system I purchased and the
last 2 water changes have been using that and also same for top of water
which would coincide with the timeline of this slow decline but when
everything else is healthy as can be I keep coming back to ware fare issues
between specimens.
Re: coral fluorescence - Thank you... H. crispa hlth., comp.
4/30/13
Thank you both for responding to me. I read a little bit each day on a
myriad of subjects. Everyone here has an amazing amount of knowledge.
One last question if I may (or two, or three... ). I have seen some
amazing pictures online of Sebaes brought back from the brink. I cannot
tell however if the green sheen mine has means it will be green once
Zooxanthellae return.
<Usually "the sheen" is telling. Many anemones begin or re-begin
brownish from white... but can/do reincorporate Zooxanthellae that are
capable of adopting pigments of a few hues>
Also assuming I do well with this one, I will likely want a couple
others of differing color. Some say that because it is not a clone they
will fight but others just say not to mix species.
<Best not to; or to take a long time (months) approach of housing
separately, mixing water between systems to acclimate them to each
other>
I would think that the chemicals given off by two corals or anemones of
the same species would be the same.
<Mmm, no; not the case... each individual, as with humans, have a
distinct chemical signature>
Wouldn't they be immune then to each other's allelopathic chemicals and or
stings?
<They are not unfortunately. Some species are FAR more dominant than
others. Bob Fenner>
Saving a Sebae/Heteractis
crispa/Systems/Health 4/7/12
Dear WWM,
<Hello Eric>
I have used your site on a couple occasions and wanted to
say thanks for providing such in depth information for beginners such
as myself.
Unfortunately, I recently ended up with a white Sebae Anemone. I bought
it from my LFS who is usually a pretty reliable guy. It looks and
behaves in a healthy manner in all aspects except the color. Which I
have come to find indicates bleaching after researching the care. From
what I have been seeing feeding of fresh shrimp and other seafoods in a
necessity in its
current state. I am hoping that you can provide me with any other tips
on saving it. Is it possible to restore the Zooxanthellae in its system
or cause it to grow some more?
<A chance.>
Is there any hope of keeping it healthy even though its bleached? I
feel really bad about buying and therefore supporting the
trade of what appears to be a commonly mistreated anemone and, I would
very much like to save it. Any advice would be appreciated.
Currently:
ammonia 0
nitrate less than 40
<Too high.>
phosphates unknown
lights ho full spectrum fluorescents
sg .025
temp 78
tank size 10 gallon
<Tank much too small to maintain health of the Sebae
Anemone.>
clarkii clown, LTA anemone
<Is the LTA in addition to the Sebae (Heteractis crispa)?>
<Not a good move in the size of tank you have. If you are
referring to the Sebae as a LTA, they are not the same. A LTA or
Corkscrew Anemone is a Macrodactyla doreensis.>
( doing very well in current tank ) small scooter blenny.
I am currently halfway through cycling my 55 gallon tank which is where
everything will be going too which is outfitted with a four bulb T5 HO
system on a timer. 2 actinic bulbs and 2 full spectrums. 10000k's.
I do a weekly water change and monitor my levels constantly. I
know its a bit of a small tank. It was my first one and i fell in love
with it so now everyone in there will be getting a nice big new home
:).
<Mmm, strongly suggest you read here and related articles found in
the header.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/marine/inverts/cnidaria/anthozoa/heteraccrispa.htm>
Thank You for any help you can offer.
<You're welcome. James (Salty Dog)>
> Re Saving a Sebae/Heteractis crispa/Systems/Health
4/8/12
> Dear WWM,
> <Hello Eric>
Thank you for the link James.
<You're welcome.>
The LTA I was referring to is a Long Tentacled or Corkscrew Anemone
which is doing well. The Sebae is a second anemone (which I impulse
purchased) shame on me I know. I however have read your article
and will be speaking with my local fish guy about taking it out and
having him hold it or take it back until my larger tank is ready
thus decreasing my bio load in my small tank. Thank you for the advice
and keep up the good work. I will certainly be more careful with my
livestock purchases in the future.
<Yes, best to read/learn before buying. James (Salty
Dog)>
Sebae Anemone Swallowed a Snail 12/07/08
I have a 90 gallon reef tank that has been running smoothly for almost
2 years now. I have a sebae anemone that I acquired about a year ago,
and it has been extremely happy in the tank and located in place. It
has grown from a tiny 4" to almost 18" now when he is fully
open. <Nice!> That now brings me to my problem. When I got home
last night, I noticed that he had begun to shrivel up. Upon further
inspection it appears that he had ingested a reasonably large Trochus
snail that may have fallen off the live rock, as I could see the last
of the shell as it was being taken into his mouth. I didn't think
there was any way to pull it without damaging the sebae, so I left it
to take its course. <This is best at this point...> Today he is
completely deflated, but I have seen him shift up and lay back down. My
question is this, will he ultimately be able to purge the snail shell
or is there something that I should try and do to help him out?
<This animal may be able to push the shell out by itself... but if a
bit of it large enough to grab shows itself... I would give it a
gentle, steady pull and remove it myself> I know there is a third
potential, but would rather not go down that path as my kids think of
him as much of a pet as the couple of fish I have in the tank. Thanks
-Rick <Welcome. Bob Fenner>
Help! Bleached Sebae Anemone, -
7/4/07 <Hello, Brenda here tonight> Please help! Have
been unable to get this anemone to eat since I purchased it a
little over a week ago! I have just been trying to feed it krill.
As I now know he was doomed from the start, since it was already
bleached when we purchased it. Is it on its last leg? What can I
do to save this anemone? <At this point you have to provide it
with a perfect environment. Please send me a list of all of your
equipment, including tank size, lighting, age of bulbs, age of
tank, tank mates, water parameters (including temperature,
salinity, ammonia, nitrates, and nitrites). Some other helpful
information would be the lighting it was kept under prior to you
receiving it. How long had it been at the place you received it
from. This anemone is indeed in poor health, but there is always
a chance for a full recovery! Brenda>
Re: Help! Bleached Sebae Anemone,
- 7/4/07 7/6/07 We have an 80 Gallon tank that we have had
for about 2 months. This was a tank that was already established,
as it was given to us by a family member and had been going for a
couple of years. It has approximately 60 lbs. of sand and 80-100
lbs. of rock. The light is a T5 with four bulbs that we have had
for approximately 1 month. <My guess is that this is not
enough lighting for this anemone, but I would need to know how
many watts these bulbs are, and their K value. Please read
through the FAQs regarding T-5 lighting for a better
understanding. http://www.wetwebmedia.com/T5fluorFAQs.htm > We
have 23 snails, 35 crabs, 2 starfish, 3 ocellaris clownfish, 1
sebae clownfish, 2 domino damsels, 2 blue and green Chromis, 3
yellow tailed damsels, 2 four stripe damsels, 1 spotted mandarin
goby, <You are overstocked for 80 gallon tank. It is also too
many crabs in my opinion. Crabs have been known to be
predators.> 1 peppermint shrimp, 2 polyps, a sea slug, and a
rock anemone. <I dont recommend mixing species of anemones.
There will likely be chemical warfare between the two.> Our
water looks like this PH 8.2, Ammonia 0, Nitrite 0.2, Nitrate 10,
Alkalinity DKH 7, Salinity 2.0-2.3. <Are you using a protein
skimmer? Your Nitrites and Nitrates need to be zero. Im not sure
you are measuring your Salinity correctly. Salinity for anemones
is best kept at 1.026. Here is a link for a better understanding:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/spg_salinity.htm At this point I recommend
returning the anemone, or finding someone local to care for it until you
have a better understanding of its care and a better understanding of
your new aquarium. Brenda>
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My
Ocellaris Clown and Sebae Anemone... a troubled mix
2/7/07 Hello, I am a new reader
of your website, I have found many useful tips and information. I
recently bought an anemone which i believe is a Sebae. It is
brownish yellow at the base of the tentacles then fading out to a
whiting yellow at the top with a purple dot at the tip. When i put
it in my tank the fish became skittish and didn't want to go
near it. <Not atypical behavior> BTW I have a Hawaiian Tang,
<Which?> a Hippo Tang, I had a flame angel that jumped out
and caused me <?> to go out and get the anemone, and two
Ocellaris clowns. For inverts I have a very small horseshoe crab
(who can be very playful), <Misplaced here... likely a cold
water species... incompatible with the sessile invertebrates> a
pink skunk cleaner shrimp, a colony polyp, a feather duster, and a
bunch of hermit crabs and various cephalopods <? doubtful>
that have come with the live rock. I also just recently bought an
electric flame scallop <A very poor choice> that his found
itself a great little home in the center and is doing awesome. The
fish that seems to be most comfortable near the anemone is the
Hawaiian Tang. I know that ocellaris clowns are not supposed to be
compatible with a Sebae anemone <Mmm, not in the wild so much...
but in captivity...> but i really want to try and see if they
will. Also, I was a little concerned with the anemone because
sometimes it looks full and luscious, while sometimes (and a little
less frequently) it is more compact, with shorter tentacles which
are thin and stringy. I was wondering if it is due to a protein
skimmer outflow which is somewhat near it, but I have done what i
can to alter the flow. <Mmm, no...> I recently supplemented
the tank with some phytoplankton for the scallop, a little bit of
iodine, some calcium, and reef vitamins (a couple hunks of shrimp
for the anemone as well). Also, for filtration i use an Emperor 280
BioWheel in my 40 gallon tank which has been criticized multiple
times, but I have no complaint because it keeps my water conditions
pristine. They consist of: ph: around 8.2 nitrite: less than .05
nitrate: around 0 (very rarely do i need to perform a water change)
ammonia: a little higher than 0 (I am watching that and preparing
for a water change soon) dKH: 11 Temp: 79-81
Last thing, I have a compact
fluorescent light from Coral Life which is 36" long. It
contains a 10,000k 96W bulb and an Actinic Blue 96W bulb. Here is a
picture for reference, just to make sure I got it all correct
http://www.thatpetplace.com/pet/product/productInfo.web?infoParam.mode=1&infoParam.itemKey=209299
(it is that model minus the lunar light). The light is on from 10am
to 8pm and it gets direct sunlight for most of the day. I was
wondering if I should close my shade or possibly keep the light on
for longer. So for the anemone, 1. Is it exhibiting normal behavior
2. Is it bleached 3. Is it dieing <Looks "about right"
per the conditions you list... is bleached, but not dying per
se> 4. Is it in good water conditions <... see WWM re
Heteractis crispa Systems...> 5. Is it a good host for a 2
ocellaris clowns who are not quite mated yet and are there any ways
to get them to become friendlier with each other (clowns and
anemones) <There is a very large chance here that this system
will crash...> I have heard
the trick of shining a flashlight on the anemone, putting a picture
near there of a clown, and putting brine shrimp in it with a
dropper (which I am currently attempting just now). I hope my
concerns are premature and there is nothing wrong at all.
Thanks a bunch,
Connor
from Massachusetts <Connor... please take the time to look up,
read re all the organisms/species you list here (on WWM)... their
Compatibility, Systems... And please run your spelling/grammar
checkers before sending us correspondence... or we'll return it
to you for correction. Bob Fenner> |
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Sebae anemone -
01/03/2006 Hi there! <Hello Marni> I have read and re-read
your responses to 'upside down anemones" but none of the
letters seems to match my situation exactly. I have a 55 gallon tank
that was set up approximately 2 months ago. To start the
tank we were given an 8 year old tomato clown because it was too
aggressive for a friends tank. We purchased a sebae anemone
and after reading your advice, we now know it was unhealthy (white with
purple tips). However, within 2 weeks half of it turned
brown so that was a good sign. It eats Mysis 2 times per
week (this Mysis is FRESH and not store bought as my husband fishes
this commercially for a living). We were having a major issue with hair
algae and we were advised to do a 30% water change, scrub all the live
rock and place everything back in the tank - which we did the next day
after preparing new water, etc. After the water change the
pH plummeted to 7.2 <Not good> and the ammonia was higher than
before we did the change but still only at .25. Nitrates
were also registering but not high. Everything was in the
"safe" range still. The tank had done its
'cycling' but even with the tank cycling it has never had any
'spikes' in the nitrates or ammonia or anything else -
everything has remained in the 'safe' range this whole time.
Since we did the water change (3 days ago) our anemone went up the side
of the tank (half on the side and half on the bottom - which is live
sand). It came detached from the side of the tank and
flipped upside down. We noticed that the bottom was
inflating and deflating regularly the next day and the anemone made its
way to a chunk of rock and reattached itself BUT 24 hours later it
flipped upside down again - which it seemed to do on purpose because of
it inflating its bottom side. All the tentacles are plump
and moving. The bottom is inflating and
deflating. The tomato clown is still actively
'nuzzling' its home. The mouth of the anemone is
right on bare glass. Should we flip it and put it back on a
its perch where it was before and monitor it to see if it flips itself
again or should we just remove it from the tank altogether?
<Have you raised the ph of the tank to an acceptable
level? If not, this needs to be done. As far as
the anemone, I would place a divider in the tank to keep the clownfish
from disturbing the anemone, then upright the anemone and give it a
chance to anchor before reintroducing the clown. James
(Salty Dog)> Thank you for any info. Marni Murray
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