Tube-dwelling anemone

Tube-dwelling anemones
Tube-dwelling Anemone, Cerianthus sp.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class: Anthozoa
Subclass: Ceriantipatharia
Order: Ceriantharia
Families (and genera)

Tube-dwelling anemones or cerianthids look very similar to sea anemones, but belong to an entirely different subclass of anthozoans. They are solitary, living buried in soft sediments. Tube anemones live and can withdraw into tubes, which are made of a fibrous material, which is made from secreted mucus and threads of nematocyst-like organelles, known as ptychocysts.

Cerianthids have a crown of tentacles that consists of two whorls of distinctly different sized tentacles. The outer whorl consists of large tentacles that extend outwards. These tentacles taper to points and are mostly used in food capture and defence. The smaller inner tentacles are held more erect than the larger lateral tentacles and are used for food manipulation and ingestion.[1]

Contents

Taxonomy

Suborder Spirularia contains the following genera[2]:

Suborder Penicilaria contains the following genera[3]:

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Brusca, R.C. & Brusca, G.J. 2002. Invertebrates Second Edition Sinauer Associates. ISBN 0-87893-097-3
  2. ^ World Register of Marine Species link: Spirularia (+species list)
  3. ^ World Register of Marine Species link: Penicilaria (+species list)

Hickman et al. (2008), Integrated Principles of Zoology (14th ed.), New York: McGraw-Hill, ISBN 978-0-07-297004-3 

External links