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Common on seaweed in this area.
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Looks like an olive anemone but it has a strange coloured oral disk, maybe coated with something? But it is rather small for an olive anemone too.
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Looks like an olive anemone but it has a strange coloured oral disk, maybe coated with something? But it is rather small for an olive anemone too.
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Looks like an olive anemone but it has a strange coloured oral disk, maybe coated with something? But it is rather small for an olive anemone too.
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Been on the lookout for these for a while. But only found the one specimen during a very low tide. On seaweed, still underwater.
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Been on the lookout for these for a while. But only found the one specimen during a very low tide. On seaweed, still underwater.
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Been on the lookout for these for a while. But only found the one specimen during a very low tide. On seaweed, still underwater.
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Been on the lookout for these for a while. But only found the one specimen during a very low tide. On seaweed, still underwater.
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Been on the lookout for these for a while. But only found the one specimen during a very low tide. On seaweed, still underwater.
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Only spotted one of these, it was on the same piece of seaweed as a wandering anemone.
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Only spotted one of these, it was on the same piece of seaweed as a wandering anemone.
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Only spotted one of these, it was on the same piece of seaweed as a wandering anemone.
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Only spotted one of these, it was on the same piece of seaweed as a wandering anemone.
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Only spotted one of these, it was on the same piece of seaweed as a wandering anemone.
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A lot of these on one piece of seaweed. Also found the other brooding anemone together with one of these on the same piece of seaweed (see 6th photo). The larger one is often identified a C. nutrix too, but I have no idea why apart from the fact it is also a brooding anemone and found in the same places - that one looks like an Epiactis species to me.
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A lot of these on one piece of seaweed. Also found the other brooding anemone together with one of these on the same piece of seaweed (see 6th photo). The larger one is often identified a C. nutrix too, but I have no idea why apart from the fact it is also a brooding anemone and found in the same places - that one looks like an Epiactis species to me.
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A lot of these on one piece of seaweed. Also found the other brooding anemone together with one of these on the same piece of seaweed (see 6th photo). The larger one is often identified a C. nutrix too, but I have no idea why apart from the fact it is also a brooding anemone and found in the same places - that one looks like an Epiactis species to me.
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A lot of these on one piece of seaweed. Also found the other brooding anemone together with one of these on the same piece of seaweed (see 6th photo). The larger one is often identified a C. nutrix too, but I have no idea why apart from the fact it is also a brooding anemone and found in the same places - that one looks like an Epiactis species to me.
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A lot of these on one piece of seaweed. Also found the other brooding anemone together with one of these on the same piece of seaweed (see 6th photo). The larger one is often identified a C. nutrix too, but I have no idea why apart from the fact it is also a brooding anemone and found in the same places - that one looks like an Epiactis species to me.
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A lot of these on one piece of seaweed. Also found the other brooding anemone together with one of these on the same piece of seaweed (see 6th photo). The larger one is often identified a C. nutrix too, but I have no idea why apart from the fact it is also a brooding anemone and found in the same places - that one looks like an Epiactis species to me.
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A lot of these on one piece of seaweed. Also found the other brooding anemone together with one of these on the same piece of seaweed (see 6th photo). The larger one is often identified a C. nutrix too, but I have no idea why apart from the fact it is also a brooding anemone and found in the same places - that one looks like an Epiactis species to me.
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I noticed in some of my photos juveniles can be seen, but usually out of focus, so all these cropped images are not the best! The first image is of an adult with a few baby ones clinging around it. The others show a variety of views of juveniles, all with features resembling the fully grown ones.