Sea anemone
Sea anemones are a group of predatory marine organisms of the order Actiniaria. Because of their colourful appearance, they are named after the anemone, a terrestrial flowering plant. Sea anemones are classified in the phylum Cnidaria, class Anthozoa, subclass Hexacorallia. As cnidarians, sea anemones are related to corals, jellyfish, tube-dwelling anemones, and Hydra. Unlike jellyfish, sea anemones do not have a medusa stage in their life cycle.
Sea anemone Temporal range: Upper Cambrian to Present | |
---|---|
A selection of sea anemones, painted by Giacomo Merculiano, 1893 | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Cnidaria |
Class: | Hexacorallia |
Order: | Actiniaria |
Suborders | |
| |
Diversity | |
46 families |
A typical sea anemone is a single polyp attached to a hard surface by its base, but some species live in soft sediment, and a few float near the surface of the water. The polyp has a columnar trunk topped by an oral disc with a ring of tentacles and a central mouth. The tentacles can be retracted inside the body cavity or expanded to catch passing prey. They are armed with cnidocytes (stinging cells). In many species, additional nourishment comes from a symbiotic relationship with single-celled dinoflagellates, with zooxanthellae, or with green algae, zoochlorellae, that live within the cells. Some species of sea anemone live in association with hermit crabs, small fish, or other animals to their mutual benefit.
Sea anemones breed by liberating sperm and eggs through the mouth into the sea. The resulting fertilized eggs develop into planula larvae which, after being planktonic for a while, settle on the seabed and develop directly into juvenile polyps. Sea anemones also breed asexually, by breaking in half or into smaller pieces which regenerate into polyps. Sea anemones are sometimes kept in reef aquariums; the global trade in marine ornamentals for this purpose is expanding and threatens sea anemone populations in some localities, as the trade depends on collection from the wild.
Anatomy
A typical sea anemone is a sessile polyp attached at the base to the surface beneath it by an adhesive foot, called a basal or pedal disc, with a column-shaped body topped by an oral disc. Most are from 1 to 5 cm (0.4 to 2.0 in) in diameter and 1.5 to 10 cm (0.6 to 3.9 in) in length, but they are inflatable and vary greatly in dimensions. Some are very large; Urticina columbiana and Stichodactyla mertensii can both exceed 1 metre (3.3 ft) in diameter and Metridium farcimen a metre in length.[1] Some species burrow in soft sediment and lack a basal disc, having instead a bulbous lower end, the physa, which anchors them in place.[1]
The column or trunk is generally more or less cylindrical and may be plain and smooth or may bear specialised structures; these include solid papillae (fleshy protuberances), adhesive papillae, cinclides (slits), and small protruding vesicles. In some species the part immediately below the oral disc is constricted and is known as the capitulum. When the animal contracts, the oral disc, tentacles and capitulum fold inside the pharynx and are held in place by a strong sphincter muscle part way up the column. There may be a fold in the body wall, known as a parapet, at this point, and this parapet covers and protects the anemone when it is retracted.[1]
The oral disc has a central mouth, usually slit-shaped, surrounded by one or more whorls of tentacles. The ends of the slit lead to grooves in the wall of the pharynx known as siphonoglyphs; there are usually two of these grooves, but some groups have a single one. The tentacles are generally tapered and often tipped by a pore, but in some species they are branched, club-tipped, or reduced to low knobs.[1] The tentacles are armed with many cnidocytes, cells that are both defensive and used to capture prey. Cnidocytes contain stinging nematocysts, capsule-like organelles capable of everting suddenly, giving the phylum Cnidaria its name.[2] Each nematocyst contains a small venom vesicle filled with actinotoxins, an inner filament, and an external sensory hair. A touch to the hair mechanically triggers a cell explosion, which launches a harpoon-like structure that attaches to the organism that triggered it, and injects a dose of venom in the flesh of the aggressor or prey.[3] At the base of the tentacles in some species lie acrorhagi, elongated inflatable tentacle-like organs armed with cnidocytes, that can flail around and fend off other encroaching anemones; one or both anemones can be driven off or suffer injury in such battles.[1]
The venom is a mix of toxins, including neurotoxins, that paralyzes the prey so the anemone can move it to the mouth for digestion inside the gastrovascular cavity. Actinotoxins are highly toxic to prey species of fish and crustaceans. However, Amphiprioninae (clownfish), small banded fish in various colours, are not affected by their host anemone's sting and shelter themselves from predators among its tentacles.[4] Several other species have similar adaptions and are also unaffected (see Mutualistic relationships). Most sea anemones are harmless to humans, but a few highly toxic species (notably Actinodendron arboreum, Phyllodiscus semoni and Stichodactyla spp.) have caused severe injuries and are potentially lethal.[5]
Digestive system
Sea anemones have what can be described as an incomplete gut; the gastrovascular cavity functions as a stomach and possesses a single opening to the outside, which operates as both a mouth and anus. Waste and undigested matter is excreted through this opening. The mouth is typically slit-like in shape, and bears a groove at one or both ends. The groove, termed a siphonoglyph, is ciliated, and helps to move food particles inwards and circulate water through the gastrovascular cavity.[6]
The mouth opens into a flattened pharynx. This consists of an in-folding of the body wall, and is therefore lined by the animal's epidermis. The pharynx typically runs for about one third the length of the body before opening into the gastrovascular cavity that occupies the remainder of the body.[1]
The gastrovascular cavity itself is divided into a number of chambers by mesenteries radiating inwards from the body wall. Some of the mesenteries form complete partitions with a free edge at the base of the pharynx, where they connect, but others reach only partway across. The mesenteries are usually found in multiples of twelve, and are symmetrically arranged around the central lumen. They have stomach lining on both sides, separated by a thin layer of mesoglea, and include filaments of tissue specialised for secreting digestive enzymes. In some species, these filaments extend below the lower margin of the mesentery, hanging free in the gastrovascular cavity as thread-like acontial filaments. These acontia are armed with nematocysts and can be extruded through cinclides, blister-like holes in the wall of the column, for use in defence.[6]
Musculature and nervous system
A primitive nervous system, without centralization, coordinates the processes involved in maintaining homeostasis, as well as biochemical and physical responses to various stimuli. There are two nerve nets, one in the epidermis and one in the gastrodermis; these unite at the pharynx, the junctions of the septa with the oral disc and the pedal disc, and across the mesogloea. No specialized sense organs are present, but sensory cells include nematocytes and chemoreceptors.[1]
The muscles and nerves are much simpler than those of most other animals, although more specialised than in other cnidarians, such as corals. Cells in the outer layer (epidermis) and the inner layer (gastrodermis) have microfilaments that group into contractile fibers. These fibers are not true muscles because they are not freely suspended in the body cavity as they are in more developed animals. Longitudinal fibres are found in the tentacles and oral disc, and also within the mesenteries, where they can contract the whole length of the body. Circular fibers are found in the body wall and, in some species, around the oral disc, allowing the animal to retract its tentacles into a protective sphincter.[6]
Since the anemone lacks a rigid skeleton, the contractile cells pull against the fluid in the gastrovascular cavity, forming a hydrostatic skeleton. The anemone stabilizes itself by flattening its pharynx, which acts as a valve, keeping the gastrovascular cavity at a constant volume and making it rigid. When the longitudinal muscles relax, the pharynx opens and the cilia lining the siphonoglyphs beat, wafting water inwards and refilling the gastrovascular cavity. In general, the sea anemone inflates its body to extend its tentacles and feed, and deflates it when resting or disturbed. The inflated body is also used to anchor the animal inside a crevice, burrow or tube.[1]
Life cycle
Unlike other cnidarians, anemones (and other anthozoans) entirely lack the free-swimming medusal stage of their life cycle;[7] the polyp produces eggs and sperm, and the fertilized egg develops into a planula larva, which develops directly into another polyp. Both sexual and asexual reproduction can occur.[1]
The sexes in sea anemones are separate in some species, while other species are sequential hermaphrodites, changing sex at some stage in their life. The gonads are strips of tissue within the mesenteries.[1] In sexual reproduction, males may release sperm to stimulate females to release eggs, and fertilization occurs, either internally in the gastrovascular cavity or in the water column. The eggs and sperm, or the larvae, usually emerge through the mouth,[8] but in some species, such as Metridium dianthus, may be swept out from the body cavity through the cinclides.[9] In many species the eggs and sperm rise to the surface where fertilisation occurs. The fertilized egg develops into a planula larva, which drifts for a while before sinking to the seabed and undergoing metamorphosis into a juvenile sea anemone. Some larvae preferentially settle onto certain suitable substrates; the mottled anemone (Urticina crassicornis) for example, settles onto green algae, perhaps attracted by a biofilm on the surface.[8]
The brooding anemone (Epiactis prolifera) is gynodioecious, starting life as a female and later becoming hermaphroditic, so that populations consist of females and hermaphrodites.[10] As a female, the eggs can develop parthenogenetically into female offspring without fertilisation, and as a hermaphrodite, the eggs are routinely self-fertilised.[8] The larvae emerge from the anemone's mouth and tumble down the column, lodging in a fold near the pedal disc. Here they develop and grow, remaining for about three months before crawling off to start independent lives.[8]
Sea anemones have great powers of regeneration and can reproduce asexually, by budding, fragmentation, or longitudinal or transverse binary fission. Some species such as certain Anthopleura divide longitudinally, pulling themselves apart, resulting in groups of individuals with identical colouring and markings.[11] Transverse fission is less common, but occurs in Anthopleura stellula and Gonactinia prolifera, with a rudimentary band of tentacles appearing halfway up the column before it splits horizontally.[12] Some species can also reproduce by pedal laceration. In this process, a ring of material may break off from the pedal disc at the base of the column, which then fragments, the pieces regenerating into new clonal individuals.[13] Alternatively, fragments detach separately as the animal creeps across a surface. In Metridium dianthus, fragmentation rates were higher in individuals living among live mussels than among dead shells, and all the new individuals had tentacles within three weeks.[14]
The sea anemone Aiptasia diaphana displays sexual plasticity. Thus asexually produced clones derived from a single founder individual can contain both male and female individuals (ramets). When eggs and sperm (gametes) are formed, they can produce zygotes derived from "selfing" (within the founding clone) or out-crossing, which then develop into swimming planula larvae.[15] Anemones tend to grow and reproduce relatively slowly. The magnificent sea anemone (Heteractis magnifica), for example, may live for decades, with one individual surviving in captivity for eighty years.[16]
Behaviour and ecology
Movement
A sea anemone is capable of changing its shape dramatically. The column and tentacles have longitudinal, transverse and diagonal sheets of muscle and can lengthen and contract, as well as bend and twist. The gullet and mesenteries can evert (turn inside out), or the oral disc and tentacles can retract inside the gullet, with the sphincter closing the aperture; during this process, the gullet folds transversely and water is discharged through the mouth.[17]
Locomotion
Although some species of sea anemone burrow in soft sediment, the majority are mainly sessile, attaching to a hard surface with their pedal disc, and tend to stay in the same spot for weeks or months at a time. They can move, however, being able to creep around on their bases; this gliding can be seen with time-lapse photography but the motion is so slow as to be almost imperceptible to the naked eye.[18] The process resembles the locomotion of a gastropod mollusc, a wave of contraction moving from the functionally posterior portion of the foot towards the front edge, which detaches and moves forwards.[19] Sea anemones can also cast themselves loose from the substrate and drift to a new location.[18] Gonactinia prolifera is unusual in that it can both walk and swim; walking is by making a series of short, looping steps, rather like a caterpillar, attaching its tentacles to the substrate and drawing its base closer; swimming is done by rapid movements of the tentacles beating synchronously like oar strokes.[20] Stomphia coccinea can swim by flexing its column, and the sea onion anemone inflates and casts itself loose, adopting a spherical shape and allowing itself to be rolled about by the waves and currents.[1] There are no truly pelagic sea anemones, but some stages in the life cycle post-metamorphosis are able, in response to certain environmental factors, to cast themselves off and have a free-living stage that aids in their dispersal.[21]
The sea onion Paranthus rapiformis lives on subtidal mud flats and burrows into the sediment, holding itself in place by expanding its basal disc to form an anchor. If it gets washed out of its burrow by strong currents, it contracts into a pearly glistening ball which rolls about.[22] Tube-dwelling anemones, which live in parchment-like tubes, are in the anthozoan subclass Ceriantharia, and are only distantly related to sea anemones.[23]
Feeding and diet
Sea anemones are typically predators, ensnaring prey of suitable size that comes within reach of their tentacles and immobilizing it with the aid of their nematocysts.[24] The prey is then transported to the mouth and thrust into the pharynx. The lips can stretch to aid in prey capture and can accommodate larger items such as crabs, dislodged molluscs and even small fish.[1] Stichodactyla helianthus is reported to trap sea urchins by enfolding them in its carpet-like oral disc.[1] A few species are parasitic on other marine organisms.[24] One of these is Peachia quinquecapitata, the larvae of which develop inside the medusae of jellyfish, feeding on their gonads and other tissues, before being liberated into the sea as free-living juvenile anemones.[25]
Mutualistic relationships
Although not plants and therefore incapable of photosynthesis themselves, many sea anemones form an important facultative mutualistic relationship with certain single-celled algae species that reside in the animals' gastrodermal cells, especially in the tentacles and oral disc. These algae may be either zooxanthellae, zoochlorellae or both. The sea anemone benefits from the products of the algae's photosynthesis, namely oxygen and food in the form of glycerol, glucose and alanine; the algae in turn are assured a reliable exposure to sunlight and protection from micro-feeders, which the sea anemones actively maintain. The algae also benefit by being protected by the sea anemone's stinging cells, reducing the likelihood of being eaten by herbivores. In the aggregating anemone (Anthopleura elegantissima), the colour of the anemone is largely dependent on the proportions and identities of the zooxanthellae and zoochlorellae present.[1] The hidden anemone (Lebrunia coralligens) has a whorl of seaweed-like pseudotentacles, rich in zooxanthellae, and an inner whorl of tentacles. A daily rhythm sees the pseudotentacles spread widely in the daytime for photosynthesis, but they are retracted at night, at which time the tentacles expand to search for prey.[26]
Several species of fish and invertebrates live in symbiotic or mutualistic relationships with sea anemones, most famously the clownfish. The symbiont receives the protection from predators provided by the anemone's stinging cells, and the anemone utilises the nutrients present in its faeces.[27] Other animals that associate with sea anemones include cardinalfish (such as Banggai cardinalfish), juvenile threespot dascyllus,[28] incognito (or anemone) goby,[29] juvenile painted greenling,[30] various crabs (such as Inachus phalangium, Mithraculus cinctimanus and Neopetrolisthes), shrimp (such as certain Alpheus, Lebbeus, Periclimenes and Thor),[31] opossum shrimp (such as Heteromysis and Leptomysis),[32] and various marine snails.[33][34][35]
Two of the more unusual relationships are those between certain anemones (such as Adamsia, Calliactis and Neoaiptasia) and hermit crabs or snails, and Bundeopsis or Triactis anemones and Lybia boxing crabs. In the former, the anemones live on the shell of the hermit crab or snail.[31][33][34][35] In the latter, the small anemones are carried in the claws of the boxing crab.[31][36]
Habitats
Sea anemones are found in both deep oceans and shallow coastal waters worldwide. The greatest diversity is in the tropics, although there are many species adapted to relatively cold waters. The majority of species cling on to rocks, shells or submerged timber, often hiding in cracks or under seaweed, but some burrow into sand and mud, and a few are pelagic.[1]
Relationship with humans
Sea anemones and their attendant anemone fish can make attractive aquarium exhibits, and both are often harvested from the wild as adults or juveniles.[37] These fishing activities significantly impact the populations of anemones and anemone fish by drastically reducing the densities of each in exploited areas.[37] Besides their collection from the wild for use in reef aquaria, sea anemones are also threatened by alterations to their environment. Those living in shallow-water coastal locations are affected directly by pollution and siltation, and indirectly by the effect these have on their photosynthetic symbionts and the prey on which they feed.[38]
In southwestern Spain and Sardinia, the snakelocks anemone (Anemonia viridis) is consumed as a delicacy. The whole animal is marinated in vinegar, then coated in a batter similar to that used to make calamari, and deep-fried in olive oil.[39] Anemones are also a source of food for fisherman communities in the east coast of Sabah, Borneo,[40] as well as the Thousand Islands (as rambu-rambu)[41] in Southeast Asia.
Fossil record
Most Actiniaria do not form hard parts that can be recognized as fossils, but a few fossils of sea anemones do exist; Mackenzia, from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale of Canada, is the oldest fossil identified as a sea anemone.[42]
Taxonomy
Sea anemones, order Actiniaria, are classified in the phylum Cnidaria, class Anthozoa, subclass Hexacorallia.[43] Rodriguez et al. proposed a new classification for the Actiniaria based on extensive DNA results.[44]
Suborders and superfamilies included in Actiniaria are:
- Suborder Anenthemonae
- Superfamily Edwardsioidea
- Superfamily Actinernoidea
- Suborder Enthemonae
- Superfamily Actinostoloidea
- Superfamily Actinioidea
- Superfamily Metridioidea
Phylogeny
External relationships
Anthozoa contains three subclasses: Hexacorallia, which contains the Actiniaria; Octocorallia; and Ceriantharia. These are monophyletic, but the relationships within the subclasses remain unresolved.[45]
†= extinct
Anthozoa |
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Internal relationships
The relationships of higher-level taxa in Carlgren's[46] classification are re-interpreted as follows:[44]
Carlgren taxon | Phylogenetic result |
---|---|
Protantheae | Sister to Boloceroidaria |
Ptychodacteae | Polyphyletic because its members are not recovered as sister taxa; clustered with members of former Endomyaria |
Endocoelantheae | Sister to athenarian family Edwardsiidae; together these clades are re-classified as suborder Anenthemonae |
Nynantheae | Polyphyletic because of the relationship between Edwardsiidae and Endocoelantheae and because members of Protantheae and Ptychodacteae are recovered as sister to its members |
Boloceroidaria | Boloceroides mcmurrichi and Bunodeopsis nested among acontiate taxa; B. daphneae apart from other Actiniaria |
Athenaria | Polyphyletic: families formerly in this suborder distributed across tree as sister to former members of Endomyaria, Acontiaria, and Endocoelantheae |
Thenaria | Boloceroidaria, Protantheae, Ptychodacteae, and most Athenaria nest within this group |
Endomyaria | Paraphyletic: includes Pychodacteae and some Athenaria |
Mesomyaria | Polyphyletic: one clade at base of Nynantheae, other lineages are associated with former members of Acontiaria |
Acontiaria | Paraphyletic; includes several lineages formerly in Mesomyaria and Athenaria, plus Boloceroidaria and Protantheae |
See also
- AETX
- Cangitoxin
- Halcurin
- Sea anemone dermatitis
- Sea anemone neurotoxin
References
- Ruppert, Edward E.; Fox, Richard, S.; Barnes, Robert D. (2004). Invertebrate Zoology (7th ed.). Cengage Learning. pp. 130–132. ISBN 978-81-315-0104-7.
- Campbell, N.; Reece, J. (2002). Biology (6th ed.). San Francisco: Pearson Education. ISBN 978-0-8053-0009-3.
- Beckmann, A.; Özbek, S. (2012). "The nematocyst: a molecular map of the cnidarian stinging organelle". International Journal of Developmental Biology. 56 (6–8): 577–582. doi:10.1387/ijdb.113472ab. PMID 22689365.
- "Fagatele Bay NMS: Clownfish and Sea Anemone". National Marine Sanctuaries. January 12, 2006. Retrieved 2010-11-20.
- Mizuno, Masashi; Ito, Yasuhiko; Morgan, B. Paul (23 July 2012). "Exploiting the Nephrotoxic Effects of Venom from the Sea Anemone, Phyllodiscus semoni, to Create a Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome Model in the Rat". Marine Drugs. 10 (7): 1582–1604. doi:10.3390/md10071582. PMC 3407933. PMID 22851928.
- Barnes, Robert D. (1982). Invertebrate Zoology. Philadelphia, PA: Holt-Saunders International. pp. 150–157. ISBN 978-0-03-056747-6.
- Castro, Peter; Huber, Michael E. (2010). Marine Biology. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 121.
- Carefoot, Tom. "Reproduction: sexual". Sea anemone. A Snail's Odyssey. Archived from the original on 10 September 2017. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
- Gemmill, James F. (1920). "The Development of the Sea-Anemones Metridium dianthus (Ellis) and Adamsia palliata (Bohad)". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. 209 (360–371): 351. Bibcode:1920RSPTB.209..351G. doi:10.1098/rstb.1920.0009.
- Dunn, Daphne Fautin (1975). "Reproduction of the Externally Brooding Sea Anemone Epiactis prolifera Verrill, 1869". The Biological Bulletin. 148 (2): 199–218. doi:10.2307/1540543. JSTOR 1540543. PMID 239758.
- Geller, Jonathan B.; Fitzgerald, Laurie J.; King, Chad E. (2005). "Fission in Sea Anemones: Integrative Studies of Life Cycle Evolution1". Integrative and Comparative Biology. 45 (4): 615–622. doi:10.1093/icb/45.4.615. PMID 21676808.
- Goffredo, Stefano; Dubinsky, Zvy, eds. (2016). The Cnidaria, Past, Present and Future: The world of Medusa and her sisters. Springer International Publishing. p. 240. ISBN 978-3-319-31305-4.
- Smith, Nathan III; Lenhoff, Howard M. (1976). Regulation of Frequency of Pedal Laceration in a Sea Anemone. Coelenterate Ecology and Behavior. pp. 117–125. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-9724-4_13. ISBN 978-1-4757-9726-8.
- Carefoot, Tom. "Reproduction: asexual". Sea anemone. A Snail's Odyssey. Archived from the original on 6 June 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
- Schlesinger A; Kramarsky-Winter E; Rosenfeld H; Armoza-Zvoloni R; Loya Y (2010). "Sexual plasticity and self-fertilization in the sea anemone Aiptasia diaphana". PLOS ONE. 5 (7): e11874. Bibcode:2010PLoSO...511874S. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0011874. PMC 2912375. PMID 20686700.
- "Heteractis magnifica: Life expectancy". Encyclopaedia of Life. Retrieved 13 September 2017.
- Kotpal, R.L. (2012). Modern Text Book of Zoology: Invertebrates. Rastogi Publications. pp. 286–292. ISBN 978-81-7133-903-7.
- Horton, Andy. "Sea anemones". British Marine Life Study Society. Retrieved 2017-07-13.
- McClendon, J.F. (January 1906). "On the locomotion of a sea anemone (Metridium marginatum)". The Biological Bulletin. 10 (2): 66–67. doi:10.2307/1535667. JSTOR 1535667.
- Robson, Elaine A. (1971). "The Behaviour and Neuromuscular System of Gonactinia prolifera, A Swimming Sea-Anemone". Journal of Experimental Biology. 55 (3): 611–640. doi:10.1242/jeb.55.3.611.
- Riemann-Zurneck, Karin (1998). "How Sessile are Sea Anemones? A Review of Free-living Forms in the Actiniaria Cnidaria: Anthozoa". Marine Ecology. 19 (4): 247–261. Bibcode:1998MarEc..19..247R. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0485.1998.tb00466.x.
- Lippson, Robert L.; Lippson, Alice Jane (2009). Life along the Inner Coast: A Naturalist's Guide to the Sounds, Inlets, Rivers, and Intracoastal Waterway from Norfolk to Key West. University of North Carolina Press. p. 181. ISBN 978-0-8078-9859-8.
- Molodtsova, T. (2015). Cerianthidae. In: Fautin, Daphne G. (2011) Hexacorallians of the World. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species on 13 July 2017
- "Sea anemone". Columbia Encyclopedia (6th ed.). 2008.
- Spaulding, James G. (1972). "The life cycle of Peachia quinquecapitata, an anemone parasitic on medusae during its larval development". The Biological Bulletin. 143 (2): 440–52. doi:10.2307/1540065. JSTOR 1540065.
- Lewis, John B. (1984). "Photosynthetic production by the coral reef anemone, Lebrunia coralligens Wilson, and behavioral correlates of two nutritional strategies". Biological Bulletin. 167 (3): 601–612. doi:10.2307/1541413. JSTOR 1541413. PMID 29320269.
- Jakimovsk, Bojani (2011). Biologically Inspired Approaches for Locomotion, Anomaly Detection and Reconfiguration for Walking Robots. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 69. ISBN 978-3-642-22505-5.
- Lieske, E.; Myers, R. (1999). Coral Reef Fishes. ISBN 0-691-00481-1
- Patzner, R.A. (5 July 2017). "Gobius incognitus". Retrieved 10 January 2018.
- Fretwell, K.; and B. Starzomski (2014). Painted greenling. Biodiversity of the Central Coast. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
- Debelius, H. (2001). Crustacea Guide of the World. ISBN 978-3931702748
- Wittmann, K.J. (2008). Two new species of Heteromysini (Mysida, Mysidae) from the island of Madeira (N.E. Atlantic), with notes on sea anemone and hermit crab commensalisms in the genus Heteromysis S. I. Smith, 1873. Crustaceana, 81(3): 351–374.
- Mercier, A.; and J. Hamel (2008). Nature and role of newly described symbiotic associations between a sea anemone and gastropods at bathyal depths in the NW Atlantic. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 358(1): 57–69.
- Goodwill, R.H.; D.G. Fautin; J. Furey; and M. Daly (2009). A sea anemone symbiotic with gastropods of eight species in the Mariana Islands. Micronesica 41(1): 117–130.
- Ates, R.M.L. (1997). Gastropod carrying actinians. In: J. C. den Hartog, eds, Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Coelenterate Biology, 1995, pp. 11–20. National Naturhistorisch Museum, Leiden, The Netherlands.
- Karplus, I; G.C. Fiedler; and P. Ramcharan (1998). The intraspecific fighting behavior of the Hawaiian Boxing Crab, Lybia edmondsoni – Fighting with dangerous weapons? Symbiosis 24: 287–302.
- Craig S. Shuman; Gregor Hodgson & Richard F. Ambrose (December 2005). "Population impacts of collecting sea anemones and anemone fish for the marine aquarium trade in the Philippines" (PDF). Coral Reefs. 24 (4): 564–573. Bibcode:2005CorRe..24..564S. doi:10.1007/s00338-005-0027-z. S2CID 25027153.
- Didier, Dominique A. (2014). Sea Anemone. Cherry Lake. pp. 26–27. ISBN 978-1-63188-108-4.
- Schwabe, Calvin W. (1979). Unmentionable cuisine. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. p. 362. ISBN 978-0-8139-0811-3.
- B.H Ridzwan; M.A Kaswandi (1995). "Hidupan marin intertidal: sumber makanan penduduk daerah Semporna, Sabah". Malaysian Journal of Nutrition. 1 (2): 105–114.
- Nurachmad Hadi; Sumadiyo. "Anemon Laut, Manfaat dan Bahayanya" (PDF). Oseana. XVII (4): 167–175.
- Conway Morris, S. (1993). "Ediacaran-like fossils in Cambrian Burgess Shale–type faunas of North America". Palaeontology. 36 (31–0239): 593–635.
- Daly, Marymegan; Brugler, Mercer R.; Cartwright, Paulyn; Collins, Allen G.; Dawson, Michael N.; Fautin, Daphne G.; France, Scott C.; McFadden, Catherine S.; Opresko, Dennis M.; Rodriguez, Estefania; Romano, Sandra L.; Stake, Joel L. (2007). "The phylum Cnidaria: A review of phylogenetic patterns and diversity 300 years after Linnaeus" (PDF). Zootaxa. 1668: 127–182. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.1668.1.11. hdl:1808/13641. ISSN 1175-5334.
- Rodríguez, E.; Barbeitos, M.S.; Brugler, M.R.; Crowley, L.M.; Grajales, A.; Gusmão, L.; Häussermann, V.; Reft, A.; Daly, M. (2014). "Hidden among sea anemones: The first comprehensive phylogenetic reconstruction of the order Actiniaria (Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Hexacorallia) reveals a novel group of hexacorals". PLOS ONE. 9 (5): e96998. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...996998R. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0096998. PMC 4013120. PMID 24806477.
- Stampar, S.N.; Maronna, M.M.; Kitahara, M.V.; Reimer, J.D.; Morandini, A.C. (March 2014). "Fast-Evolving Mitochondrial DNA in Ceriantharia: A Reflection of Hexacorallia Paraphyly?". PLOS ONE. 9 (1): e86612. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...986612S. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0086612. PMC 3903554. PMID 24475157.
- Carlgren O. (1949). A survey of the Ptychodactiaria, Corallimorpharia and Actiniaria. K Svenska VetenskapsAkad Handl 1: 1–121.
External links
- Order Actiniaria Archived 2008-07-04 at the Wayback Machine
- Actiniaria.com
- Photos of various species of Sea Anemones from the Indopacific
- Anemone Armies Battle to a Standoff
- Sea anemones look like sea flowers but they are animals of the Phylum Cnidaria
- Information about Ricordea Florida Sea anemones & pictures
- Photographic Database of Cambodian Sea Anemones
- Photos of Sea Anemones