Daisy anemone

Daisy anemone

Daisy anemone by Devon Wildlife Trust

Daisy anemone

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Scientific name: Cereus pedunculatus
It is easy to be confused by these flower-like animals with flowery names! The ‘daisy’ anemone is one of the larger UK anemone species!

Top facts

Stats

Up to 12cm tall and 7cm wide.

Conservation status

Common.

When to see

April - October.

About

One of the UK’s larger anemones, the daisy anemone is usually found in deep pools or hiding in holes or crevices, or buried in the sediment with only tentacles displayed, down to a depth of around 50m.

What to look for

Between 500-1000 short tentacles, plum to brown in colour, with a dark trumpet-shaped column up to 12cm tall. However this is nearly always buried in sediment. Although it is similar in appearance to the 'elegant anemone' the daisy has the distinctive trumpet shaped column.

Where to find

Common along the west coast of Britain and Ireland.

Did you know?

Anemones have to stay attached to rocks or other hard surfaces in order to stay alive, so they have evolved stinging cells within their tentacles so that they can protect themselves and be able to catch food!