Cereus pedunculatus or the daisy anemone is a species of sea anemone in the family Sagartiidae. It is found in shallow parts of the northeast Atlantic Ocean and in the North Sea and the Mediterranean Sea. It is an omnivore, predator and scavenger.[1]

Cereus pedunculatus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class: Hexacorallia
Order: Actiniaria
Family: Sagartiidae
Genus: Cereus
Species:
C. pedunculatus
Binomial name
Cereus pedunculatus
(Pennant, 1777) [1]
Synonyms[1]
List
  • Actinea bellis (Pennant, 1777)
  • Actinea johstoni
  • Actinea templetonii
  • Actinia brevicirrata
  • Actinia brevicirrhata Risso, 1826
  • Actinia bellis Ellis & Solander, 1786
  • Actinia johnstoni Cocks
  • Actinia pedunculata Pennant, 1777
  • Actinia templetonii Couch, 1844
  • Actinocereus pedunculata
  • Actinocereus pedunculatus
  • Cereus bellis
  • Cereus pedonculatus
  • Cereus pendunculatus
  • Cribrina bellis Ehrenberg
  • Discosoma brevicirrhata
  • Haliactis bellis Ellis
  • Helaria bellis
  • Heliactis bellis Ellis
  • Hormathia bellis (Forbes)
  • Hydra calyciflora Gaertner, 1762
  • Sagartia bellis (Ellis & Solander)
  • Sagartia troglodytes Gosse
  • Scyphia bellis (Ellis)

Description

edit

C. pedunculatus has a base that is sometimes frilled at the edge. It is wider than the trunk which is covered with small dots and can be cream, pink, brown or violet. The trunk may be stalk-like and up to ten centimetres tall, or shaped more like a trumpet. Both these forms can retract back into a squat, tentacle-fringed mound. The oral disc may be seven centimetres wide or even wider. There are more than 500 short, flaccid tentacles which may be a plain colour, banded or speckled.[2][3]

Distribution and habitat

edit

C. pedunculatus is found in the northeast Atlantic Ocean south to the Azores, in the North Sea and the Mediterranean Sea[1] at depths down to 50 metres.[3] It is common round the southern and western coasts of the British Isles. It may grow in rock pools, often with the base and column concealed in a crevice, or it may be found in muddy gravel where it is anchored to a stone or other sub-surface object. In this case, the tentacles are the only part that project and the whole animal can be withdrawn into the substrate if danger threatens.[2]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d Cereus pedunculatus (Pennant, 1777) World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2011-09-01.
  2. ^ a b John Barrett & C. M. Young (1958). Collins Pocket Guide to the Sea Shore. p. 58.
  3. ^ a b Daisy anemone: Cereus pedunculatus Archived 2012-10-03 at the Wayback Machine Marine Life Information Network. Retrieved 2011-09-01.
edit