Paranemonia
Anemonia cinerea
Characteristics
Actiniidae with broad pedal disc. Column smooth, low. Margin tentaculate, no fosse. Sphincter absent or with tendency to form a very weak, elongate, diffuse one. Tentacles in comparison with the length of the body long, not retractile, their longitudinal muscles ectodermal, as also the radial muscles of oral disc. Siphonoglyphs indistinct. Mesenteries numerous, no directives (always?). A variable number of mesenteries perfect, the stronger fertile. Considerably more mesenteries at the base than at the margin. Retractors diffuse. Parietobasilar muscles well developed forming a fold on the stronger mesenteries. Propagation by longitudinal fission. Cnidom: spirocysts, basitrichs, microbasic p-mastigophors.References
Carlgren, O. 1949. A Survey of the Ptychodactiaria, Corallimorpharia and Actiniaria. Kungl. Svenska Vetenskapsakadamiens Handlingar, series 4, volume 1, number 1.
About This Page
The information provided on this page is based on Oscar Carlgren's 1949 catalog.Copyright © 1949 Swedish Academy of Sciences.
Please note that Carlgren's text contains a number of errors, and much of the information is now out of date. An update of the catalog is currently under preparation in Daphne Fautin's laboratory, and the results of this work will be incorporated in future versions of this page.
Keyboarding of Carlgren's catalog was done as part of a project to create an electronic database of the sea anemones of the world, funded by NSF Grant DEB9521819, awarded to Daphne G. Fautin. This grant is in the program Partnerships to Enhance Expertise in Taxonomy (PEET). Susanne Hauswaldt, Katherine Pearson, and April Wakefield-Pagels contributed to the keyboarding effort.
Correspondence regarding this page should be directed to Daphne G. Fautin at
Page copyright © 2000
All Rights Reserved.
Citing this page:
Tree of Life Web Project. 2000. Paranemonia. Anemonia cinerea http://tolweb.org/Anemonia_cinerea/18364/2000.01.01 in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org/
. Version 01 January 2000 (temporary).