Korsaranthus natalensis

Korsaranthus natalensis, commonly known as the spinnaker anemone or the candy-striped anemone, is a species of sea anemone in the family Actiniidae.[1] It is the only member of its genus.

Korsaranthus natalensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class: Anthozoa
Order: Actiniaria
Family: Actiniidae
Genus: Korsaranthus
Riemann-Zurneck, 1999
Species:
K. natalensis
Binomial name
Korsaranthus natalensis
(Carlgren, 1938)

Description

The spinnaker anemone is a medium-sized anemone of up to 10 cm in diameter. It is a vividly coloured red and white striped anemone. Its column has fine striping. It has about 50 broadly striped tentacles. Red and pink lines radiate outwards from its mouth. It has a walking disc which is red with white striping.[2]

Distribution

The spinnaker anemone is endemic to the South African coast, where it is found from False Bay to Durban. It inhabits waters from 10 m to at least 30 m in depth.

Ecology

a close up of the parachute foot of a spinnaker anemone

This is a rare anemone. It is mobile and may be observed, when not attached to the reef, using its parachute-like walking disc to sail to new locations. It preys on octocorals.[2]

gollark: Hatchlings are mostly fine for sickness, right? They don't get affected much?
gollark: Yep, that hatchling is sick again...
gollark: "We have trained a neural network to badly approximate a simple formula. This is a new breakthrough in DC nonsense."
gollark: It would probably get around the reverse engineering T&C thing.
gollark: Ah, of course, take my few-megabytes-of-RAM and 1% CPU application to new levels of processing power use.

References

  1. Branch, G.M., Branch, M.L, Griffiths, C.L. and Beckley, L.E. 2010. Two Oceans: a guide to the marine life of southern Africa ISBN 978-1-77007-772-0
  2. Jones, Georgina. A field guide to the marine animals of the Cape Peninsula. SURG, Cape Town, 2008. ISBN 978-0-620-41639-9
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