I'm not quite sure what a 'clown anemone' is, i researched it but the only things i found were on clownfish or anenomes. Maybe you were meaning clownfish?? If so here is some info i found about clownfish, sorry if this is not what you were meaning, but hey, you might learn something new anyway! (i sure didn't know all this stuff about clownfish!)
Scientific name: Amphiprion species
Country: Worldwide tropical
Continent: Oceania, Asia, Africa, South America, Central and North America
Diet: Algae, crustaceans, molluscs
Food & feeding: Omnivore
Habitats: Ocean
Conservation status: Not Threatened
Relatives: Thread-fin damselfish
The sea anemone is classified as a belonging in the phylum Cnidaria. They are further classified as members of the genus Actinia Fragacae,
There are 46 different families of the order Actiniaria(sea anemones)
Genus: Metridium
Species: senile
Order Actiniaria.
What is the species of a sea anemone?
Sea anemones are carnivores
There are hundreds of species of anemones, of all sorts of sizes and weights.
Mutualism is a symbiotic relationship in which both species benefit.In other words, two species help each other out. Note that neither species is harmed in the relationship.The usual example is: Sea anemones protect clownfish from predators, and the clownfish defend the anemones from butterflyfish.
Genus species or when writing it in hand it should be Genus species, but underlined.
Sea anemones are found in oceans all over the world, and are the most abundant in tropical waters. There are over 1000 different species of the sea anemone and they are found everywhere.
Anemone is a genus of about 120 species of flowering plants in the family Ranunculaceae, native to the temperate zones. The reason why Anemones are unique is because of how many species of Anemone there are.
They are from the metridium species
Genus: CheloniidaeSome Species are:CarettaCheloniaEretmochelysLepidochelysNatator
Atlantic Snakelocks Anemone (Anemonia viridis), and Hormathid sea anemones (ex. Stylobates aenus) are just two of many. The sea anemones share a class, Anthozoa, with the corals. There are roughly 6,500 estimated species in the Anthozoa class.
Since there are a number of corals, anemones, nudibranchs, rays and gastropods that can sting... they are too varied to be from the same genus.
Many species of wentletrap sea snails attack sea anemones. Some species swallow small and juvenile sea anemones whole, while others apparently nibble on tentacles and tissues of large sea anemones. Many sea slugs that prey on sea anemones, such as the rainbow nudibranch, Dendronotus iris, do not kill their prey, but merely shear off a few tentacles with each attack.
i am asking you
are sea anemones decomposers
sea anemones do not have shells !
Sea anemones are not plants.
Sea anemones are consumers yes.
any color at all